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Fuller W. Bazer

Researcher at Texas A&M University

Publications -  833
Citations -  50274

Fuller W. Bazer is an academic researcher from Texas A&M University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Conceptus & Endometrium. The author has an hindex of 109, co-authored 803 publications receiving 46194 citations. Previous affiliations of Fuller W. Bazer include Texas A&M University System & Auburn University.

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Cathepsins in the ovine uterus: regulation by pregnancy, progesterone, and interferon tau.

TL;DR: Endometrial CTS genes are regulated by ovarian and placental hormones, and CTSL is a novel IFNtau-stimulated gene expressed only in luminal epithelium and superficial glandular epithelia of the endometrium.
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Arginine nutrition and fetal brown adipose tissue development in nutrient-restricted sheep

TL;DR: Results indicate that l-arginine administration enhanced fetal pancreatic and brown adipose tissue development and the postnatal effects of increased pancreas and brown fat tissue growth warrant further study.
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RNA Sequencing Reveals Novel Gene Clusters in Bovine Conceptuses Associated with Maternal Recognition of Pregnancy and Implantation

TL;DR: This transcriptome analysis of the bovine conceptus will provide a blueprint of the dynamic changes in gene expression occurring during maternal recognition and implantation and will complement existing knowledge of the temporal changes in the endometrial transcriptome, thus facilitating a better understanding of conceptus-maternal cross talk during the peri-implantation period of pregnancy.
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Fibroblast Growth Factor-10: A Stromal Mediator of Epithelial Function in the Ovine Uterus

TL;DR: The in vivo spatial expression pattern suggests that FGF-10 is a novel endometrial stromal cell-derived mediator of uterine epithelial and conceptus trophectodermal functions.
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Maternal recognition of pregnancy in cattle.

TL;DR: Nature and potential functions of chemical signals involved in the process of pregnancy recognition in cattle, and the conceptus-endometrial-ovarian signal sequence that is associated with maternal recognition of pregnancy in cattle are discussed.