Literature DB >> 16824446

The effect of undernutrition on the establishment of pregnancy in the ewe.

José-Alfonso Abecia1, Cecilia Sosa, Fernando Forcada, Ana Meikle.   

Abstract

The relationship between nutrition and reproduction in sheep has been the subject of research in several international groups. This review will particularly focus on the effects of undernutrition on the potential causes of reproductive failure including abnormalities of the ovum or the embryo, luteal inadequacy and failure of the supply of progesterone to the uterus, or the mechanisms involved in maternal recognition of pregnancy. The level of nutrition and peripheral progesterone concentrations are inversely related, and increased rates of embryo loss, associated with higher progesterone concentrations in ewes with low levels of nutrition have been reported. Undernutrition may act through changes in the distribution of progesterone in the endometrium. Thus, lower endometrial levels on day 5 of the cycle in ewes fed half of their maintenance requirements have been observed, providing a link between the known role of progesterone in embryo survival by the modulation of uterine function and the higher embryo losses found in undernourished ewes. The evidence of an effect of maternal nutrition on IFNtau secretion from the conceptus and of PGF2alpha production from the uterus is presented. Moreover, undernutrition provokes a reduction in the sensitivity of the endometrium to progesterone that may affect embryo survival. Finally, a state of undernutrition induces changes in the endometrial sensitivity to steroid hormones at early stages of pregnancy that could adversely alter uterine environment to the detriment of embryo survival.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16824446     DOI: 10.1051/rnd:2006018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Reprod Nutr Dev        ISSN: 0926-5287


  8 in total

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3.  Factors affecting the reproductive performance of Awassi sheep flocks in north-east of Jordan: an epidemiological study.

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5.  Temperature and rainfall are related to fertility rate after spring artificial insemination in small ruminants.

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7.  Follicle Stimulating Hormone (FSH) Dosage Based on Body Weight Enhances Ovulatory Responses and Subsequent Embryo Production in Goats.

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8.  Integrated ovarian mRNA and miRNA transcriptome profiling characterizes the genetic basis of prolificacy traits in sheep (Ovis aries).

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  8 in total

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