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Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses

Literally, reproductive immunology was born in bovine on-farm reproduction where seminal experiments intended for developing methods for embryo transfer in cattle were performed. Actually, these experiments led to two of major concepts and fundamental principles of reproductive immunology using the...

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Autores principales: Samardžija, M., Lojkić, M., Maćešić, N., Valpotić, H., Butković, I., Šavorić, J., Žura Žaja, I., Leiner, D., Đuričić, D., Marković, F., Kočila, P., Vidas, Z., Gerenčer, M., Kaštelan, A., Milovanović, A., Lazarević, M., Rukavina, D., Valpotić, I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7755402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33198593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01652176.2020.1852336
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author Samardžija, M.
Lojkić, M.
Maćešić, N.
Valpotić, H.
Butković, I.
Šavorić, J.
Žura Žaja, I.
Leiner, D.
Đuričić, D.
Marković, F.
Kočila, P.
Vidas, Z.
Gerenčer, M.
Kaštelan, A.
Milovanović, A.
Lazarević, M.
Rukavina, D.
Valpotić, I.
author_facet Samardžija, M.
Lojkić, M.
Maćešić, N.
Valpotić, H.
Butković, I.
Šavorić, J.
Žura Žaja, I.
Leiner, D.
Đuričić, D.
Marković, F.
Kočila, P.
Vidas, Z.
Gerenčer, M.
Kaštelan, A.
Milovanović, A.
Lazarević, M.
Rukavina, D.
Valpotić, I.
author_sort Samardžija, M.
collection PubMed
description Literally, reproductive immunology was born in bovine on-farm reproduction where seminal experiments intended for developing methods for embryo transfer in cattle were performed. Actually, these experiments led to two of major concepts and fundamental principles of reproductive immunology using the bovine species as a model for biomedical research, namely the concept of acquired immunological tolerance and the paradox of the semiallogeneic bovine foetus whereby such organism can develop within an immunologically competent host. Peter Medawar, a scientist who together with Frank Macfarlande Burnet shared the 1960 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for discovery of acquired immunological tolerance, while studying dizygotic cattle twins, thereby giving birth to reproductive immunology. Also, these findings significantly influenced development of organ transplants and showed that using farm animals as models for studying transplantation immunology had general relevance for mammalian biology and health including those of humans. However, the interest for further research of the fascinating maternal immune influences on pregnancy and perinatal outcomes and of the prevention and treatment of immunologically mediated reproductive disorders in viviparous mammals of veterinary relevance by veterinary immunologists and reproductive clinicians have been very scarce regarding the application of nonspecific immunomodulatory agents for prevention and treatment of subfertility and infertility in pigs and cattle, but still broadening knowledge in this area and hold great potential for improving such therapy in the future. The aim of the current overview is to provide up-to-date information and explaining/translating relevant immunology phenomena into veterinary practice for specialists and scientists/clinicians in reproduction of animals.
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spelling pubmed-77554022021-01-08 Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses Samardžija, M. Lojkić, M. Maćešić, N. Valpotić, H. Butković, I. Šavorić, J. Žura Žaja, I. Leiner, D. Đuričić, D. Marković, F. Kočila, P. Vidas, Z. Gerenčer, M. Kaštelan, A. Milovanović, A. Lazarević, M. Rukavina, D. Valpotić, I. Vet Q Review Literally, reproductive immunology was born in bovine on-farm reproduction where seminal experiments intended for developing methods for embryo transfer in cattle were performed. Actually, these experiments led to two of major concepts and fundamental principles of reproductive immunology using the bovine species as a model for biomedical research, namely the concept of acquired immunological tolerance and the paradox of the semiallogeneic bovine foetus whereby such organism can develop within an immunologically competent host. Peter Medawar, a scientist who together with Frank Macfarlande Burnet shared the 1960 Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine for discovery of acquired immunological tolerance, while studying dizygotic cattle twins, thereby giving birth to reproductive immunology. Also, these findings significantly influenced development of organ transplants and showed that using farm animals as models for studying transplantation immunology had general relevance for mammalian biology and health including those of humans. However, the interest for further research of the fascinating maternal immune influences on pregnancy and perinatal outcomes and of the prevention and treatment of immunologically mediated reproductive disorders in viviparous mammals of veterinary relevance by veterinary immunologists and reproductive clinicians have been very scarce regarding the application of nonspecific immunomodulatory agents for prevention and treatment of subfertility and infertility in pigs and cattle, but still broadening knowledge in this area and hold great potential for improving such therapy in the future. The aim of the current overview is to provide up-to-date information and explaining/translating relevant immunology phenomena into veterinary practice for specialists and scientists/clinicians in reproduction of animals. Taylor & Francis 2020-12-07 /pmc/articles/PMC7755402/ /pubmed/33198593 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01652176.2020.1852336 Text en © 2020 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. 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 work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Review
Samardžija, M.
Lojkić, M.
Maćešić, N.
Valpotić, H.
Butković, I.
Šavorić, J.
Žura Žaja, I.
Leiner, D.
Đuričić, D.
Marković, F.
Kočila, P.
Vidas, Z.
Gerenčer, M.
Kaštelan, A.
Milovanović, A.
Lazarević, M.
Rukavina, D.
Valpotić, I.
Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
title Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
title_full Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
title_fullStr Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
title_full_unstemmed Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
title_short Reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
title_sort reproductive immunology in viviparous mammals: evolutionary paradox of interactions among immune mechanisms and autologous or allogeneic gametes and semiallogeneic foetuses
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7755402/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33198593
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01652176.2020.1852336
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