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Journal ArticleDOI

Large offspring syndrome in cattle and sheep.

Lorraine E. Young, +2 more
- 01 Sep 1998 - 
- Vol. 3, Iss: 3, pp 155-163
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TLDR
Four different situations have been identified that result in the large offspring syndrome: in vitro embryo culture, asynchronous embryo transfer into an advanced uterine environment, nuclear transfer and maternal exposure to excessively high urea diets.
Abstract
Bovine and ovine embryos exposed to a variety of unusual environments prior to the blastocyst stage have resulted in the development of unusually large offspring which can also exhibit a number of organ defects. In these animals, the increased incidence of difficult parturition and of fetal and neonatal losses has limited the large-scale use of in vitro embryo production technologies commonly used in humans and other species. Four different situations have been identified that result in the syndrome: in vitro embryo culture, asynchronous embryo transfer into an advanced uterine environment, nuclear transfer and maternal exposure to excessively high urea diets. However, programming of the syndrome by all of these situations is unpredictable and not all of the symptoms described have been observed universally. Neither the environmental factors inducing the large offspring syndrome nor the mechanisms of perturbation occurring in the early embryo and manifesting themselves in the fetus have been identified.

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Citations
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Epigenetics and developmental programming of welfare and production traits in farm animals

TL;DR: The evidence that prenatal risk factors, including suboptimal parental nutrition, gestational stress, exposure to environmental chemicals and advanced breeding technologies, can determine traits such as postnatal growth, feed efficiency, milk yield, carcass composition, animal welfare and reproductive potential is reviewed.
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Genetic conflict, genomic imprinting and establishment of the epigenotype in relation to growth.

TL;DR: The evolution of imprinting can be understood as the stable outcome of sexual selection acting differently on the parental alleles of genes that influence parental investment in offspring, and maternal or paternal expression at imprinted loci is associated with reduced or increased parental investment, respectively.

Factors influencing in vitro embryo production

TL;DR: The aim of this review is to give a brief overview of some factors that influence in vitro embryo development in cattle.
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Effects of fetal calf serum, phenazine ethosulfate and either glucose or fructose during in vitro culture of bovine embryos on embryonic development after cryopreservation.

TL;DR: Culture of embryos with PES, which reduces cytoplasmic lipid content, improved cryotolerance of bovine embryos; post‐cryopreservation survival of blastocysts averaged over vitrification and slow freezing, although trends were similar, the benefit of fructose compared to glucose was greater for controls than for FCS or PES.
Journal ArticleDOI

Cryobanking of farm animal gametes and embryos as a means of conserving livestock genetics.

TL;DR: The aim of the present review is to describe the cryobanking purposes, the collection goals, the type of genetic material to store and the reproductive biotechnologies utilized for the cryopreservation of farm animal gametes and embryos.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Differential Display of Eukaryotic Messenger RNA by Means of the Polymerase Chain Reaction

TL;DR: A method to separate and clone individual messenger RNAs (mRNAs) by means of the polymerase chain reaction using a set of oligonucleotide primers, one being anchored to the polyadenylate tail of a subset of mRNAs, the other being short and arbitrary in sequence so that it anneals at different positions relative to the first primer.
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Enhanced rates of cleavage and development for sheep zygotes cultured to the blastocyst stage in vitro in the absence of serum and somatic cells: amino acids, vitamins, and culturing embryos in groups stimulate development.

TL;DR: Investigation of sheep zygote development of amino acids, ammonium, vitamins, and culture of embryos in groups in Synthetic Oviduct Fluid medium supplemented with BSA found indirect evidence that ruminant embryos utilize amino acids to a greater extent than do rodent embryos.
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Lamb birth weight is affected by culture system utilized during in vitro pre-elongation development of ovine embryos.

TL;DR: The data suggest that different culture conditions can produce embryos with differing morphology, apparent chemical composition, and rate of development, resulting in lambs with differing gestation length and birth weight.
Journal ArticleDOI

DNA methylation and imprinting: why bother?

TL;DR: It is proposed that DNA methylation is only important for the somatic lineages, but has no role in embryonic lineages including the germ line, suggesting imprinting having no intrinsic role in mammalian development.
Journal ArticleDOI

The production of unusually large offspring following embryo manipulation: Concepts and challenges

TL;DR: The production of large offspring after embryo manipulation casts new perspectives on the roles of reproductive technology in both livestock and human reproduction and an understanding of the underlying cellular mechanisms should lead to improved procedures for the handling and manipulation of embryos.
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