| Literature DB >> 25908972 |
Kathrin A Dunlap1, Jacob D Brown1, Ashley B Keith1, M Carey Satterfield1.
Abstract
Inadequate delivery of nutrients results in intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR), which is a leading cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality in livestock. In ruminants, inadequate nutrition during pregnancy is often prevalent due to frequent utilization of exensive forage based grazing systems, making them highly susceptible to changes in nutrient quality and availability. Delivery of nutrients to the fetus is dependent on a number of critical factors including placental growth and development, utero-placental blood flow, nutrient availability, and placental metabolism and transport capacity. Previous findings from our laboratory and others, highlight essential roles for amino acids and their metabolites in supporting normal fetal growth and development, as well as the critical role for amino acid transporters in nutrient delivery to the fetus. The focus of this review will be on the role of maternal nutrition on placental form and function as a regulator of fetal development in ruminants.Entities:
Keywords: Intrauterine growth restriction; Nutrient transport; Placenta; Ruminant
Year: 2015 PMID: 25908972 PMCID: PMC4407308 DOI: 10.1186/s40104-015-0012-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Anim Sci Biotechnol ISSN: 1674-9782
Primers utilized for quantitative real-time PCR analysis
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|---|---|---|---|
| SLC7A1 | CCTAGCGCTCCTGGTCATCA | 56 | AF212146 |
| GGGCGTCCTTGCCAAGTA | |||
| SLC7A2 | GCAGAGCAGCGCTGTCTTT | 62 | XM_002698665 |
| ACTGTCCAGAGTGACGATTTTCC | |||
| SLC7A5 | GGTGAACCCTGGTACGAATTTAGT | 64 | NM_174613 |
| TCCACGCTCGAGAGGTATCTG | |||
| SLC7A6 | CATTTGTGAACTGCGCCTATGT | 72 | NM_001075937 |
| CCAGGACCTTGGCATAAGTGA | |||
| SLC7A7 | TCAGGCTTGCCCTTCTACTTCT | 64 | NM_001075151 |
| GGAGCCAAAGAGGTCGTTTG | |||
| SLC7A8 | GGCCATGATCCACGTGAAG | 65 | NM_001192889 |
| GGGTGGAGATGCATGTGAAGA | |||
| SLC38A2 | CAGCTATAGTTCCAACAGCGACTTC | 77 | NM_001082424 |
| CATCGGCATAATGGCTTTTCA | |||
| SLC38A4 | TGCTTCATGCTTACAGCAAAGTG | 63 | NM_001205943 |
| CAGCCAGGCGTACCATGAG |
1The amplification target.
2The forward and reverse DNA oligos used in the amplification of the target. Forward and reverse primers do not necessarily indicate the in vivo direction of transcription.
3The accession number to the ovine or bovine sequence that was used during primer design.
Figure 1Steady-state mRNA levels of the large neutral amino acid transporter SLC7A5. Results indicate that mRNA expression of SLC7A is higher (P < 0.05) in placentomes from ewes on day 50 of pregnancy as compared to day 100 and 125 and that levels are similarly greater on day 75 than 125. Columns lacking a similar letter differ statistically (P < 0.05).
Figure 2Steady-state mRNA levels of the cationic amino acid transporters (A) SLC7A2 and (B) SLC7A6 are presented. Results indicate that mRNA expression of SLC7A2 and SLC7A6 are higher (P < 0.05) in placentomes from day 100 than day 50. Results also indicate that SLC7A6 mRNA levels are lower in placentomes from day 125 than 75. Columns lacking a similar letter differ statistically (P < 0.05).
Figure 3Steady-state mRNA levels of the sodium coupled neutral amino acid transporter (SNATs) SL38A2 is presented. Results indicate that mRNA expression of SLC38A2 is not different from days 50 to 125 in nutrient restricted ewes (P > 0.1), however in placentomes of well-fed ewes SLC38A2 increases from days 50 to 75, decreases to day 100 and then increases to day 125 (P < 0.05).