Anim Reprod Sci
February 2005
Fertility of Holstein cows has been decreasing for years and, to a lesser extent, the fertility of heifers too but more recently. A hypothesis to explain this phenomenon may be that the chronology of events leading to ovulation is different for those animals bred nowadays when compared to what was reported previously; this would result in an inappropriate time of insemination. Therefore, two experiments were designed to investigate the relationships among estrus behavior, follicular growth, hormonal events and time of ovulation in Holstein cows and heifers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to determine the relationship between energy status before calving and calf birth weight and their potential effects on interval between calving and first ovulation. Sixty-nine Limousine, suckled beef cows were sampled weekly over a 3-yr period during the last 2 m.o.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe variations in lipid metabolism according to the physiological stage and their relationship to the resumption of postpartum ovarian cyclicity were assessed in Limousine beef cows fed a grass diet over 3 yr. Weekly blood samples were collected from 59 cows beginning 10 wk before to 20 wk after calving to evaluate serum cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations and electrophoretic lipoprotein fractions. After parturition, progesterone concentrations were also measured at weekly intervals to determine time of resumption of ovulation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of the present analysis was to determine whether anti-Müllerian hormone concentrations in prepubertal plasma or adult rete testis fluid are related to the number or function of Sertoli cells in rams or to the presence of the FecB Booroola gene. Twenty rams from two Booroola crosses, differing in their testicular masses were analysed; in each cross, half of the animals were heterozygous carriers of the FecB gene. The data from rams, during prepuberty and at adulthood during the non-sexual season, were analysed by two-way ANOVA and residual correlations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ultimate aim of any estrus synchronization method is to allow artificial insemination at a predetermined time after the end of treatment. This requires a very tight synchronization of estrus which is not observed in goats after administration of the usual fluorogestone acetate (FGA)/prostaglandin (PG) F2 alpha/equine chorionic gonadotrophin (eCG) treatment. The possibility to improve the synchronization of estrus and luteinizing hormone (LH) peak with different progestagens (FGA versus norgestomet) and routes of administration (vaginal sponge versus subcutaneous ear implant) was evaluated in two experiments where goats received one of three progestagen treatments: (1) a vaginal sponge impregnated with 45 mg of FGA, (2) a half-implant of norgestomet, or (3) a whole implant containing 3 mg of norgestomet.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReprod Fertil Dev
February 1998
The variability between animals in the timing of oestrus after administration of a synchronization treatment seems to explain the low rate of fertility in goats inseminated at a predetermined time after progesterone withdrawal. Two experiments were performed during the breeding season to test whether the variation was due to the exogenous hormone regime or to the endogenous physiology of the animals. Twenty-one goats were given a synchronization treatment consisting of a vaginal sponge impregnated with 45 mg of fluorogestone acetate (FGA) for 11 days associated with intramuscular injection of 400 I.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of the experiment was to test the hypothesis that a variable and/or insufficient level of progestagen at the end of a treatment to synchronize estrus in goats could explain variability in the onset of estrus. The experiment was performed during the anestrous season on 2 herds, one of Alpine (n = 49) the other of Saanen (n = 53) dairy goats. The animals were allocated to 1 of 3 treatments: Group 1 received a vaginal sponge impregnated with 45 mg of fluorogestone acetate (FGA) on Day 0; Group 2 received a sponge on Day 0 plus a second sponge on Day 7; Group 3 received a sponge on Day 0 plus a second sponge on Day 9.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn goats treated to induce superovulation, insemination at a predetermined time after the end of progestagen treatment leads to a low fertilization rate. To solve this problem we developed a new treatment based on the control of the occurrence of the endogenous LH peak with a GnRH antagonist (Antarelix). The first experiment was designed to determine the dose of LH required to mimic a spontaneous LH preovulatory discharge; the injection of 3 mg, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the complementary DNA structure obtained by reverse transcription and polymerase chain reaction amplification encoding the complete amino acid sequence for the bovine follicle-stimulating hormone receptor (bFSHr). The deduced amino acid sequence for the cDNA revealed a mature polypeptide consisting of 678 amino acids (theoretical weight of 76.4 kDa) and a 17 amino acid putative leading signal peptide.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFContracept Fertil Sex
October 1993
Therapeutic effects of GnRH or its analogs have been tested in various physiological and pathological situations in domestic ruminants. Without any previous selection based on clinical observations, these treatments have a low efficiency to improve reproductive parameters. When used to induce ovulation in anoestrous females, GnRH or its analogs are less efficient than progestagen treatments associated with PMSG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe fertility rate for goats following artificial insemination (AI) is usually analyzed according to herd or treatment groups. However, these general information are insufficient to allow identification of specific factors which affect this individual reproductive performance. In the present experiment 640 dairy goats were used to analyze to what extent the interval from sponge removal to estrus affects the results of AI, performed at a predetermined time following sponge removal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe morphology and in-vivo function of the Leydig cells were studied in rams when spermatogenesis had been disrupted by a single exposure of the testes 20 days earlier to a temperature of about 42 degrees C for 45 min. To avoid complications due to changed negative feedback from the testes to the pituitary with consequent changes in the degree of gonadotrophic stimulation, ten of the animals (five heated and five unheated) were surgically hypophysectomized when the testes were heated and then treated twice daily with pituitary extract. Six intact rams (three heated and three unheated) were also studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRepeated administration of xenogenic gonadotropins in human or animal species may be responsible for antibody production and refractoriness. An experiment was conducted in which goats were treated with porcine FSH (p-FSH) at 6-week intervals for a period of 7 months. A sensitive radioimmunoassay (RIA) was used to detect antibodies to p-FSH in plasma samples taken at short-term intervals during a 7-month period.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Steroid Biochem Mol Biol
February 1991
Granulosa cells from fully differentiated bovine follicles were cultured in serum-free medium for 4 days. At the end of culture, the number of viable cells was low (10-15% of cells plated on day one) and only progesterone secretion responded to FSH. Insulin increased the number of viable cells at the end of culture (ED50 # 70 ng/ml) and stimulated progesterone secretion (ED50 # 50 ng/ml); the secretion of oestradiol-17 beta over basal value was evident only for concentrations of 1000 and 10,000 ng/ml.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn Exp. 1, the changes in pulsatile LH secretion at the onset of the breeding season were observed in 20 intact, mature Saanen does. Blood was sampled every 20 min for 6 h each week from the beginning of August until the onset of ovulatory activity, as evidenced by cycles in plasma progesterone.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTheriogenology
February 1986
In two different experiments, superovulation was attempted with a PMSG-PG treatment; a bovine anti-PMSG serum was injected at estrus. After 2500, 5000 and 7500 IU of PMSG injected during the luteal phase, the mean ovulation rates were respectively 16.2 +/- 7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFree oestradiol-17 beta, free + conjugated oestradiol-17 beta (total oestradiol-17 beta) and progesterone in milk, and free oestradiol-17 beta and progesterone in plasma were measured in 16 cyclic cows injected with FSH to induce superovulation during the treatment and periovulatory periods. The patterns of steroid secretion were the same in milk as in plasma but at different concentrations. Among oestrogens, the highest concentrations were measured for total oestradiol-17 beta in milk, followed by free oestradiol in plasma and free oestradiol in milk.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProgesterone concentrations in the milk of 86 Friesian cows induced to superovulate with an FSH-Cloprostenol treatment were studied daily from the day of estrus (D 0) to Day 7 (D 7). From D 2, a significant correlation between progesterone concentrations and ovulation rate was observed. Such a relationship was also observed beginning to D 3 between progesterone concentrations and the number of embryos recovered.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA radioimmunoassay for free estradiol-17 beta, conjugated estradiol-17 beta or total (free + conjugated) estradiol-17 beta in defatted milk of cows is described. Conjugated estradiol-17 beta was hydrolyzed by enzymes of Helix pomatia juice. Estrogens were extracted with dichloromethane; no other purification step was required before radioimmunoassay because of the high specificity of the antiserum.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEighteen cows were superovulated by injecting 3000 IU of PMSG during the luteal phase, followed 48h later with an injection of Estrumate. They were then placed in a control group or were given anti-PMSG antiserum at either 12h or 24h after the onset of oestrus. Sixteen of these animals were used for the same experiment five months later.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEighty-six adult, cyclic, anestrous and postpartum Ile-de-France ewes were placed under general anaesthesia. A catheter was inserted in the utero-ovarian vein (u.o.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOestradiol-17 beta and conjugated oestrone, oestradiol-17 beta and oestradiol-17 alpha were measured in peripheral plasma of heifers treated with PMSG/PGF-2 alpha to induce superovulation. Changes in the concentrations of each hormone were synchronous, the highest level being near oestrus. For a given number of ovulations the hormone with the highest concentration was total oestradiol-17 alpha, then came total oestrone, total oestradiol-17 beta and oestradiol-17 beta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCryptorchidism was induced in 5 pre-pubertal lambs and 7 adult rams, 5 months after surgery, testicular weight and membrane protein content were 4-fold lower than in the control. The total number of Leydig cells per testis was markedly decreased but their size was not changed. In contrast, the total number of Sertoli cells per testis was not affected but their nuclear size was smaller.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe patterns of LH, FSH, prolactin and oestradiol-17beta, before and during natural oestrus, and of progesterone during the following cycle were studied in four French Alpine dairy goats and compared with those obtained after synchronization of oestrus in the same animals. The highest concentration of oestradiol-17beta was measured at the beginning of oestrus and was followed 3 hours later by simultaneous rises of LH, FSH and prolactin. A second FSH peak was observed 48h after the first one.
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