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Luciana Relly Bertolini

Researcher at Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul

Publications -  49
Citations -  842

Luciana Relly Bertolini is an academic researcher from Pontifícia Universidade Católica do Rio Grande do Sul. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oocyte & Somatic cell nuclear transfer. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 49 publications receiving 760 citations. Previous affiliations of Luciana Relly Bertolini include University of Rio Grande & University of Fortaleza.

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Growth, development, and gene expression by in vivo- and in vitro-produced day 7 and 16 bovine embryos.

TL;DR: The in vitro production of bovine embryos negatively affected the amount of gene expression on day 7 and the rate of development on day 16, which appeared to be significant for growth and development.
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Establishment of pluripotent cell lines from porcine preimplantation embryos.

TL;DR: In vivo pluripotency of the cells was demonstrated by birth of a chimeric piglet, documented by pigmentation and DNA markers, and the ability to direct the development of nuclear-transfer embryos to the blastocyst stage was demonstrated.
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The transgenic animal platform for biopharmaceutical production.

TL;DR: The approval of two mammary gland-derived recombinant proteins for commercial and clinical use has boosted the interest for more efficient, safer and economic ways to generate transgenic founders to meet the increasing demand for biomedical proteins worldwide.
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Evidence of increased substrate availability to in vitro-derived bovine foetuses and association with accelerated conceptus growth

TL;DR: The results indicated larger concepti and increased placental fructogenic capacity in mid- to late IVP pregnancies, features which appeared to be associated with an enhanced substrate supply, potentially glucose, to the conceptus.
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Developmental Potential of Bovine Hand-Made Clone Embryos Reconstructed by Aggregation or Fusion with Distinct Cytoplasmic Volumes

TL;DR: The increase in cytoplasmic volume, either by fusion or by aggregation, had a positive effect on embryo development, supporting the establishment of pregnancies and the birth of a viable clone calf after transfer to recipients.