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Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Obesity has been associated with altered reproductive activity in mares and may negatively affect fertility. To examine the influence of long-term high-energy (HE) feeding on fertility, Shetland pony mares were fed a diet containing 200% of net energy (NE) requirements during a three...

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Autores principales: D’Fonseca, Nicky M. M., Gibson, Charlotte M. E., Hummel, Iris, van Doorn, David A., Roelfsema, Ellen, Stout, Tom A. E., van den Broek, Jan, de Ruijter-Villani, Marta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7912773/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33535548
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11020361
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author D’Fonseca, Nicky M. M.
Gibson, Charlotte M. E.
Hummel, Iris
van Doorn, David A.
Roelfsema, Ellen
Stout, Tom A. E.
van den Broek, Jan
de Ruijter-Villani, Marta
author_facet D’Fonseca, Nicky M. M.
Gibson, Charlotte M. E.
Hummel, Iris
van Doorn, David A.
Roelfsema, Ellen
Stout, Tom A. E.
van den Broek, Jan
de Ruijter-Villani, Marta
author_sort D’Fonseca, Nicky M. M.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Obesity has been associated with altered reproductive activity in mares and may negatively affect fertility. To examine the influence of long-term high-energy (HE) feeding on fertility, Shetland pony mares were fed a diet containing 200% of net energy (NE) requirements during a three-year study. The incidence of hemorrhagic anovulatory follicles (HAF) and annual duration of cyclicity were compared to those in control mares receiving a maintenance diet. Day-7 embryos were flushed and transferred between donor and recipient mares from both groups; the resulting conceptuses were collected 21 days after transfer to assess conceptus development. HE mares became obese, and embryos recovered from HE mares were more likely to succumb to early embryonic death. The period of annual cyclicity was extended in HE compared to control mares in all years. The incidence of HAFs did not consistently differ between HE and control mares. No differences in embryo morphometric parameters were apparent. In conclusion, consuming a HE diet extended the duration of cyclicity, and appeared to increase the likelihood of embryos undergoing early embryonic death following embryo transfer. ABSTRACT: Obesity has been associated with altered reproductive activity in mares, and may negatively affect fertility. To examine the influence of long-term high-energy (HE) feeding on fertility, Shetland pony mares were fed a diet containing 200% of net energy (NE) requirements during a three-year study. The incidence of hemorrhagic anovulatory follicles (HAF) and annual duration of cyclicity were compared to those in control mares receiving a maintenance diet. Day-7 embryos were flushed and transferred between donor and recipient mares from both groups; the resulting conceptuses were collected 21 days after transfer to assess conceptus development. HE mares became obese, and embryos recovered from HE mares were more likely to succumb to early embryonic death. The period of annual cyclicity was extended in HE compared to control mares in all years. The incidence of HAFs did not consistently differ between HE and control mares. No differences in embryo morphometric parameters were apparent. In conclusion, consuming a HE diet extended the duration of cyclicity, and appeared to increase the likelihood of embryos undergoing early embryonic death following embryo transfer.
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spelling pubmed-79127732021-02-28 Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares D’Fonseca, Nicky M. M. Gibson, Charlotte M. E. Hummel, Iris van Doorn, David A. Roelfsema, Ellen Stout, Tom A. E. van den Broek, Jan de Ruijter-Villani, Marta Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Obesity has been associated with altered reproductive activity in mares and may negatively affect fertility. To examine the influence of long-term high-energy (HE) feeding on fertility, Shetland pony mares were fed a diet containing 200% of net energy (NE) requirements during a three-year study. The incidence of hemorrhagic anovulatory follicles (HAF) and annual duration of cyclicity were compared to those in control mares receiving a maintenance diet. Day-7 embryos were flushed and transferred between donor and recipient mares from both groups; the resulting conceptuses were collected 21 days after transfer to assess conceptus development. HE mares became obese, and embryos recovered from HE mares were more likely to succumb to early embryonic death. The period of annual cyclicity was extended in HE compared to control mares in all years. The incidence of HAFs did not consistently differ between HE and control mares. No differences in embryo morphometric parameters were apparent. In conclusion, consuming a HE diet extended the duration of cyclicity, and appeared to increase the likelihood of embryos undergoing early embryonic death following embryo transfer. ABSTRACT: Obesity has been associated with altered reproductive activity in mares, and may negatively affect fertility. To examine the influence of long-term high-energy (HE) feeding on fertility, Shetland pony mares were fed a diet containing 200% of net energy (NE) requirements during a three-year study. The incidence of hemorrhagic anovulatory follicles (HAF) and annual duration of cyclicity were compared to those in control mares receiving a maintenance diet. Day-7 embryos were flushed and transferred between donor and recipient mares from both groups; the resulting conceptuses were collected 21 days after transfer to assess conceptus development. HE mares became obese, and embryos recovered from HE mares were more likely to succumb to early embryonic death. The period of annual cyclicity was extended in HE compared to control mares in all years. The incidence of HAFs did not consistently differ between HE and control mares. No differences in embryo morphometric parameters were apparent. In conclusion, consuming a HE diet extended the duration of cyclicity, and appeared to increase the likelihood of embryos undergoing early embryonic death following embryo transfer. MDPI 2021-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC7912773/ /pubmed/33535548 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11020361 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
D’Fonseca, Nicky M. M.
Gibson, Charlotte M. E.
Hummel, Iris
van Doorn, David A.
Roelfsema, Ellen
Stout, Tom A. E.
van den Broek, Jan
de Ruijter-Villani, Marta
Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares
title Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares
title_full Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares
title_fullStr Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares
title_full_unstemmed Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares
title_short Overfeeding Extends the Period of Annual Cyclicity but Increases the Risk of Early Embryonic Death in Shetland Pony Mares
title_sort overfeeding extends the period of annual cyclicity but increases the risk of early embryonic death in shetland pony mares
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7912773/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33535548
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11020361
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