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Cattle Embryo Growth Development and Viabilty.
Morris, Dermot G. ; Grealy, M. ; Leese, H.J. ; Diskin, Michael G. ; Sreenan, J.M.
Morris, Dermot G.
Grealy, M.
Leese, H.J.
Diskin, Michael G.
Sreenan, J.M.
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2001-06-01
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Morris, D.G., Grealy, M., Leese, H.J., Diskin, M.G., Sreenan, J.M., Cattle Embryo Growth Development and Viabilty, End of Project Reports, Teagasc, 2001.
Abstract
A major problem for the cattle breeding industry is the high rate of early
embryo loss which compromises reproductive efficiency and genetic
improvement, resulting in serious financial loss to farmers. An important
part of the Teagasc research programme in this area is the investigation
of basic parameters of cattle embryo growth, development and viability
during the critical period when most of the embryo loss occurs. We have
now characterised this period of embryo development and to our
knowledge, this is the first report describing the morphology, growth
rate, protein content and metabolic activity of cattle embryos during this
period. The main results are summarised here and detailed results have
been published in the papers listed at the end of this report.
Embryo growth rate and protein content increased exponentially
between days 8 and 13 after fertilisation. Furthermore, there was a high
rate of protein synthetic activity, energy and amino acid metabolism and
signal transduction activity, all reaching a peak between days 8 and 13
after fertilisation. Because of the high rate of metabolic activity evident
during this time it is likely that the embryos are very susceptible to
environmental changes that have the potential to interfere with normal
developmental mechanisms. The results arising from this project suggest
that the critical period of early embryo loss in cattle may now be
narrowed to a time window of day 8 to 13 rather than day 8 to 16 as
presumed up to now. The main results are summarised.
