Embryo development in dairy cattle

During the past 50 years, the fertility of high-producing lactating dairy cows has decreased, associated with intensive selection for increased milk production. The physiological and metabolic changes associated with high milk production, including decreased (glucose, insulin, IGF-I) or increased (nonesterified fatty acids, ketone bodies) concentrations of circulating metabolites during nutrient partitioning associated with negative energy balance as well as uterine and nonuterine diseases have been linked with poor reproductive efficiency. Fertilization is typically above 80% and does not seem to be the principal factor responsible for the low fertility in dairy cows. However, early embryonic development is compromised in high-producing dairy cows, as observed by most embryonic losses occurring during the first 2 weeks after fertilization and may be linked to compromised oocyte quality due to a poor follicular microenvironment, suboptimal reproductive tract environment for the embryo, and/or inadequate maternal-embryonic communication. These and other factors related to embryo development will be discussed. © 2016 Elsevier Inc.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lonergan, P., Fair, T., Forde, N., Rizos, D.
Format: review biblioteca
Language:eng
Published: 2016
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/2409
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spelling dig-inia-es-20.500.12792-24092020-12-15T09:47:51Z Embryo development in dairy cattle Lonergan, P. Fair, T. Forde, N. Rizos, D. During the past 50 years, the fertility of high-producing lactating dairy cows has decreased, associated with intensive selection for increased milk production. The physiological and metabolic changes associated with high milk production, including decreased (glucose, insulin, IGF-I) or increased (nonesterified fatty acids, ketone bodies) concentrations of circulating metabolites during nutrient partitioning associated with negative energy balance as well as uterine and nonuterine diseases have been linked with poor reproductive efficiency. Fertilization is typically above 80% and does not seem to be the principal factor responsible for the low fertility in dairy cows. However, early embryonic development is compromised in high-producing dairy cows, as observed by most embryonic losses occurring during the first 2 weeks after fertilization and may be linked to compromised oocyte quality due to a poor follicular microenvironment, suboptimal reproductive tract environment for the embryo, and/or inadequate maternal-embryonic communication. These and other factors related to embryo development will be discussed. © 2016 Elsevier Inc. 2020-10-22T12:56:38Z 2020-10-22T12:56:38Z 2016 review http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/2409 10.1016/j.theriogenology.2016.04.040 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ open access
institution INIA ES
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libraryname Biblioteca del INIA España
language eng
description During the past 50 years, the fertility of high-producing lactating dairy cows has decreased, associated with intensive selection for increased milk production. The physiological and metabolic changes associated with high milk production, including decreased (glucose, insulin, IGF-I) or increased (nonesterified fatty acids, ketone bodies) concentrations of circulating metabolites during nutrient partitioning associated with negative energy balance as well as uterine and nonuterine diseases have been linked with poor reproductive efficiency. Fertilization is typically above 80% and does not seem to be the principal factor responsible for the low fertility in dairy cows. However, early embryonic development is compromised in high-producing dairy cows, as observed by most embryonic losses occurring during the first 2 weeks after fertilization and may be linked to compromised oocyte quality due to a poor follicular microenvironment, suboptimal reproductive tract environment for the embryo, and/or inadequate maternal-embryonic communication. These and other factors related to embryo development will be discussed. © 2016 Elsevier Inc.
format review
author Lonergan, P.
Fair, T.
Forde, N.
Rizos, D.
spellingShingle Lonergan, P.
Fair, T.
Forde, N.
Rizos, D.
Embryo development in dairy cattle
author_facet Lonergan, P.
Fair, T.
Forde, N.
Rizos, D.
author_sort Lonergan, P.
title Embryo development in dairy cattle
title_short Embryo development in dairy cattle
title_full Embryo development in dairy cattle
title_fullStr Embryo development in dairy cattle
title_full_unstemmed Embryo development in dairy cattle
title_sort embryo development in dairy cattle
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12792/2409
work_keys_str_mv AT lonerganp embryodevelopmentindairycattle
AT fairt embryodevelopmentindairycattle
AT forden embryodevelopmentindairycattle
AT rizosd embryodevelopmentindairycattle
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