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Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle

Intensive selection for milk production has led to reduced reproductive efficiency in high-producing dairy cattle. The impact of intensive milk production on oocyte quality as well as early embryo development has been established but few analyses have addressed this question at the initiation of imp...

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Autores principales: Lesage-Padilla, Audrey, Forde, Niamh, Poirée, Mélanie, Healey, Gareth D., Giraud-Delville, Corinne, Reinaud, Pierrette, Eozenou, Caroline, Vitorino Carvalho, Anaïs, Galio, Laurent, Raliou, Mariam, Oudin, Jean-François, Richard, Christophe, Sheldon, I. Martin, Charpigny, Gilles, Lonergan, Pat, Sandra, Olivier
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5744954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29281695
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189942
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author Lesage-Padilla, Audrey
Forde, Niamh
Poirée, Mélanie
Healey, Gareth D.
Giraud-Delville, Corinne
Reinaud, Pierrette
Eozenou, Caroline
Vitorino Carvalho, Anaïs
Galio, Laurent
Raliou, Mariam
Oudin, Jean-François
Richard, Christophe
Sheldon, I. Martin
Charpigny, Gilles
Lonergan, Pat
Sandra, Olivier
author_facet Lesage-Padilla, Audrey
Forde, Niamh
Poirée, Mélanie
Healey, Gareth D.
Giraud-Delville, Corinne
Reinaud, Pierrette
Eozenou, Caroline
Vitorino Carvalho, Anaïs
Galio, Laurent
Raliou, Mariam
Oudin, Jean-François
Richard, Christophe
Sheldon, I. Martin
Charpigny, Gilles
Lonergan, Pat
Sandra, Olivier
author_sort Lesage-Padilla, Audrey
collection PubMed
description Intensive selection for milk production has led to reduced reproductive efficiency in high-producing dairy cattle. The impact of intensive milk production on oocyte quality as well as early embryo development has been established but few analyses have addressed this question at the initiation of implantation, a critical milestone ensuring a successful pregnancy and normal post-natal development. Our study aimed to determine if contrasted maternal metabolism affects the previously described sensory properties of the endometrium to the conceptus in cattle. Following embryo transfer at Day 7 post-oestrus, endometrial caruncular (CAR) and intercaruncular (ICAR) areas were collected at Day 19 from primiparous postpartum Holstein-Friesian cows that were dried-off immediately after parturition (i.e., never milked; DRY) or milked twice daily (LACT). Gene quantification indicated no significant impact of lactation on endometrial expression of transcripts previously reported as conceptus-regulated (PLET1, PTGS2, SOCS6) and interferon-tau stimulated (RSAD2, SOCS1, SOCS3, STAT1) factors or known as female hormone-regulated genes (FOXL2, SCARA5, PTGS2). Compared with LACT cows, DRY cows exhibited mRNA levels with increased expression for FOXL2 transcription factor and decreased expression for oxidative stress-related genes (CAT, SOD1, SOD2). In vivo and in vitro experiments highlighted that neither interferon-tau nor FOXL2 were involved in transcriptional regulation of CAT, SOD1 and SOD2. In addition, our data showed that variations in maternal metabolism had a higher impact on gene expression in ICAR areas. Collectively, our findings prompt the need to fully understand the extent to which modifications in endometrial physiology drive the trajectory of conceptus development from implantation onwards when maternal metabolism is altered.
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spelling pubmed-57449542018-01-09 Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle Lesage-Padilla, Audrey Forde, Niamh Poirée, Mélanie Healey, Gareth D. Giraud-Delville, Corinne Reinaud, Pierrette Eozenou, Caroline Vitorino Carvalho, Anaïs Galio, Laurent Raliou, Mariam Oudin, Jean-François Richard, Christophe Sheldon, I. Martin Charpigny, Gilles Lonergan, Pat Sandra, Olivier PLoS One Research Article Intensive selection for milk production has led to reduced reproductive efficiency in high-producing dairy cattle. The impact of intensive milk production on oocyte quality as well as early embryo development has been established but few analyses have addressed this question at the initiation of implantation, a critical milestone ensuring a successful pregnancy and normal post-natal development. Our study aimed to determine if contrasted maternal metabolism affects the previously described sensory properties of the endometrium to the conceptus in cattle. Following embryo transfer at Day 7 post-oestrus, endometrial caruncular (CAR) and intercaruncular (ICAR) areas were collected at Day 19 from primiparous postpartum Holstein-Friesian cows that were dried-off immediately after parturition (i.e., never milked; DRY) or milked twice daily (LACT). Gene quantification indicated no significant impact of lactation on endometrial expression of transcripts previously reported as conceptus-regulated (PLET1, PTGS2, SOCS6) and interferon-tau stimulated (RSAD2, SOCS1, SOCS3, STAT1) factors or known as female hormone-regulated genes (FOXL2, SCARA5, PTGS2). Compared with LACT cows, DRY cows exhibited mRNA levels with increased expression for FOXL2 transcription factor and decreased expression for oxidative stress-related genes (CAT, SOD1, SOD2). In vivo and in vitro experiments highlighted that neither interferon-tau nor FOXL2 were involved in transcriptional regulation of CAT, SOD1 and SOD2. In addition, our data showed that variations in maternal metabolism had a higher impact on gene expression in ICAR areas. Collectively, our findings prompt the need to fully understand the extent to which modifications in endometrial physiology drive the trajectory of conceptus development from implantation onwards when maternal metabolism is altered. Public Library of Science 2017-12-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5744954/ /pubmed/29281695 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189942 Text en © 2017 Lesage-Padilla et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lesage-Padilla, Audrey
Forde, Niamh
Poirée, Mélanie
Healey, Gareth D.
Giraud-Delville, Corinne
Reinaud, Pierrette
Eozenou, Caroline
Vitorino Carvalho, Anaïs
Galio, Laurent
Raliou, Mariam
Oudin, Jean-François
Richard, Christophe
Sheldon, I. Martin
Charpigny, Gilles
Lonergan, Pat
Sandra, Olivier
Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle
title Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle
title_full Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle
title_fullStr Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle
title_full_unstemmed Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle
title_short Maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and FOXL2 genes in cattle
title_sort maternal metabolism affects endometrial expression of oxidative stress and foxl2 genes in cattle
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5744954/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29281695
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0189942
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