scholarly journals Effect of GnRH pulse infusion on LH profiles and ovarian follicle populations at 7 weeks post-partum in beef cows in different body conditions

Author(s):  
L. Pinto Andrade ◽  
S.M. Rhind ◽  
L.A. Wright ◽  
S.R. McMillen ◽  
T.K. Whyte

Previous studies have indicated that low body condition (LBC) at calving increases the duration of the postpartum anoestrous period in suckling beef cows (Henricks et al 1986; Wright et al 1987). The results of recent experiments also suggest that animals in LBC have a reduced incidence of LH pulses (Wright et al 1990) which is associated with a reduction in the incidence of large, oestrogenic, potentially ovulatory ovarian follicles (Prado et al 1990).An experiment was designed to determine a) whether or not the normal process of follicular development can be accelerated in LBC cows by infusion of pulses of GnRH, so that their postpartum anoestrous period was as short as that of cows in HBC and b) the effect of GnRH pulse infusions on associated gonadotropin profiles.

Author(s):  
L.P. Andrade ◽  
S.M. Rhind ◽  
I.A. Wright ◽  
S.R. McMillen ◽  
T.K. Whyte

Cows in low body condition exhibit a prolonged postpartum anoestrous period and a delayed return to normal follicular function (Prado et al 1990). Previous studies have shown that the effects of body condition on gonadotrophin profiles are inconsistent (Wright et al 1990; Rhind et al 1992) indicating that the effects of body condition on ovarian function cannot be explained by changes in gonadotrophin profiles alone. Since nutritional state influences growth hormone profiles which in turn can affect ovarian function (Gong et al 1991), it was postulated that the effects of body condition on the duration of postpartum anoestrus could be mediated through changes in profiles of this hormone.The aim of the present study was to determine the effect of growth hormone on ovarian follicle development and associated gonadotrophin profiles in post-partum beef cows.


1992 ◽  
Vol 4 (5) ◽  
pp. 515 ◽  
Author(s):  
SM Rhind ◽  
TA Bramley ◽  
IA Wright ◽  
SR McMillen

An experiment was conducted to determine whether or not the effect of body condition at parturition, and thereafter, on the duration of the post-partum anoestrous period was mediated through differences in gonadotrophin receptor concentrations in the ovarian follicles. Two groups of cows were fed to achieve body condition scores of > or = 2.75 (H; n = 14) or < or = 2.00 (L; n = 15) at parturition (this had led to differences in the duration of post-partum anoestrus in previous experiments) and then fed to maintain liveweight and condition until ovariectomy at nine weeks post partum. There was no effect of body condition on the mean (+/- s.e.) number of large (> or = 8 mm diameter) follicles per cow (3.0 +/- 0.27) but a greater proportion of the follicles of H cows, compared with L cows, was oestrogenic (secreting > 250 pg oestradiol h-1 in culture) (0.75 v. 0.5; chi 2 = 3.40; P = 0.06). Mean concentrations (pg hormone bound per mg protein) of follicle stimulating hormone (FSH) receptors in both granulosa (H, 157.3; L, 136.6; standard error of difference (s.e.d.) = 27.2) and thecal tissue (H, 4.14; L, 4.35; s.e.d. = 1.66) were similar for H and L cows. There was no difference associated with treatment in luteinizing hormone (LH) receptor concentrations in either granulosa (H, 40.3; L, 37.2; s.e.d. = 6.67) or thecal tissue (H, 48.9; L, 48.0; s.e.d. = 6.03). The concentration of FSH receptors in granulosa tissue was lower in non-oestrogenic follicles than in oestrogenic follicles (80.0 v. 188.1; s.e.d. = 40.4; P < 0.01).


1990 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 103-108 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. Prado ◽  
S. M. Rhind ◽  
I. A. Wright ◽  
A. J. F. Russel ◽  
S. R. McMillen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe effect of body condition at calving on ovarian follicle characteristics during post-partum anoestrus was studied in 38 suckling Blue-Grey cows with mean body-condition scores of 2·80 (s.e. 0·05) (H) or 2·35 (s.e. 0·05) (L) at calving and fed so that they maintained live weight and body condition during lactation. Cows of each level of body condition were ovariectomized at either 5 or 9 weeks after calving and follicles ≥3 mm in diameter were dissected out and incubated in a medium (Medium 199) for 2 h. Follicle incubates were assayed for progesterone, testosterone and oestradiol. L cows had fewer follicles ≥3 mm in diameter than H cows (24·1 v. 44·9; P < 0·05) at 5 weeks post partum due to a lower number of small (3 to 4 mm) follicles (12·9 v. 30·6; P < 0·05). At 9 weeks there was no effect of body condition on mean numbers of follicles (38·1 v. 40·4; P > 0·05). The proportions of healthy, intermediate and atretic follicles in all cows were 0·35, 0·20 and 0·45 respectively; these proportions were not affected by body condition or time of ovariectomy. Body condition did not affect the overall mean capacity of the cultured follicles to produce oestradiol or progesterone in vitro but testosterone production was higher in follicles from H than L cows (6406 v. 5206 pg/h; P < 0·05). However, at 9 weeks post partum a greater proportion of H than L cows had a large (>8 mm), healthy, highly oestrogenic follicle (4/8 v. 1/7; P = 0·18).At 9 weeks post partum, the four large, healthy, oestrogen-active follicles (those secreting >250 pg/h) from H cows were approximately 11-fold more oestrogenic than the single comparable follicle from L cows (7100 v. 635 pg/h; P > 0·05). There was little difference at week 5 post partum: 3288 and 2785 pg/h (P > 0·05) for H and L cows respectively. Oestrogen-active follicles from H cows were significantly more oestrogenic at 9 than 5 weeks post partum (5807 v. 3021 pg/h; P < 0·05). The results suggest that the body condition-related reduction in the number and steroidogenic capacity of large oestrogenic follicles in post-partum cows may be associated with a reduction in LH pulsatility.


1996 ◽  
Vol 8 (6) ◽  
pp. 951 ◽  
Author(s):  
LP Andrade ◽  
SM Rhind ◽  
IA Wright ◽  
SR McMillen ◽  
PJ Goddard ◽  
...  

The effects of bovine somatotrophin (bST) on ovarian follicle development and function and associated gonadotrophin profiles during the first nine weeks post partum were investigated in beef cows. Thirty-two cows (Shorthorn x Galloway) in moderately low body condition (BC) at calving were fed to maintain BC thereafter. At Weeks 2, 4, 6 and 8 post partum, animals were injected with 320 mg bovine somatotrophin (bST) (T, treated; n = 17) or with the carrier oil only (C, control; n = 15). Ovulation occurred in 4 of 17 T cows and 0 of 15 C cows (P = 0.10) by nine week post partum. Treatment with bST did not affect the numbers of small (3-8 mm in diameter) or large (> 8 mm in diameter) follicles or the granulosa cell populations but enhanced the oestradiol (P < 0.05) and insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) content (P < 0.01) of large follicles by nine weeks post partum. It did not significantly affect the testosterone concentrations of large follicles. Circulating concentrations of growth hormone (GH) and IGF-I were higher in T cows than in C cows (P < 0.001) but were unrelated to gonadotrophin profiles or gonadotrophin receptor concentrations in the follicles. At Week 8, plasma insulin concentrations were higher in T cows than in C cows both before (P < 0.05) and after (P < 0.05) glucose injection. It is concluded that GH may play an important role in mediating the effects of nutritional state on ovarian function during the post-partum period, possibly through alteration of intrafollicular IGF-I concentrations.


1987 ◽  
Vol 45 (3) ◽  
pp. 395-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. Wright ◽  
S. M. Rhind ◽  
A. J. F. Russel ◽  
T. K. Whyte ◽  
Alison J. McBean ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTAn experiment was conducted to examine factors affecting the length of the post-partum anoestrous period and associated effects on LH, FSH and prolactin. Forty-six cows (24 Hereford × Friesian and 22 Blue-Grey) ranging in body condition score at calving from 1·50 to 2·75 were used. They were individually fed chopped barley straw and concentrate at either 50 (low) or 91 (high) MJ metabolizable energy per day from calving. At 34 days post partum half the cows were separated from their calves for 48 h. The duration of the post-partum anoestrous period was estimated from progesterone concentrations in thrice weekly blood samples. Blood samples were collected every 20 min for 10 h periods immediately prior to calf separation, during the last 10 h of calf separation and 1 week later. All samples were analysed for LH, and every third sample was analysed for FSH and prolactin.There were no significant effects of genotype, feeding level or calf separation on the length of the post-partum anoestrous period. There was a negative association between body condition score at calving and the length of the anoestrous period, with each unit increase in body condition score reducing the anoestrous period by 43 (s.e. 20) days. There was some evidence that feeding level affected the number of thin cows (body condition score ≤2·25 at calving) which were still acyclic at the end of the experiment, but not the number of fat cows (body condition score ≥2·5 at calving).FSH levels were not affected by any of the factors examined. Prolactin concentrations were higher in fatter cows, in cows on the higher level of feeding and in Blue-Grey cows. Prolactin concentrations decreased during the period of calf separation. Genotype and feeding level had no effect on LH concentration or LH pulse frequency. LH pulse frequency was increased (P < 0·05) during the period of calf separation, but there was no effect 1 week later. There was a significant positive relationship between LH puise frequency and body condition score at calving in two of the three sampling periods.It is suggested that the effect of body condition on the duration of the post-partum anoestrous period i s mediated through effects on LH pulse frequency.


2018 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 33-38 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Rybska ◽  
Sandra Knap ◽  
Maurycy Jankowski ◽  
Michal Jeseta ◽  
Dorota Bukowska ◽  
...  

AbstractFolliculogenesis is the process of ovarian follicle formation,, taking presence during foetal period. During the follicular development, oogoniums undergo meiosis and oocytes are formed. In the ovaries of new born sows, primary and secondary follicles are present and, 90 days after birth, tertiary follicles appear. During development in the ovarian follicles growth of granulosa cells and differentiation of the thecal cells can be observed. A cavity filled with follicular fluid appears. Granulosa cells are divided into: mural cells and corona radiata, which together with the oocyte form the cumulus oophorus. Corona radiata cells, mural layers and oolemma contact each other by a network of gap junctions. Secreted from the pituitary gland, FSH and LH gonadotropin hormones act on receptors located in granular and follicular cells. In the postnatal life tertiary follicles and Graafian follicles are formed. When the follicle reaches a diameter of 1 mm, further growth depends on the secretion of gonadotropins. Mature ovarian follicles produce: progestins, androgens and oestrogens. The growth, differentiation and steroidogenic activity of ovarian follicles, in addition to FSH and LH, is also affected by prolactin, oxytocin, steroid and protein hormones, numerous proteins from the cytokine and interleukin family, metabolic hormones like insulin, glucocorticoids, leptin, thyroid hormones and growth hormones. Despite numerous studies, many processes related to folliculogenesis have not been discovered Learning the mechanisms regulating reproductive processes would allow to easily distinguish pathological processes and discover more and more genes and mechanisms of their expression in cells that build ovarian follicles.


1999 ◽  
Vol 1999 ◽  
pp. 4-4 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. D. Sinclair ◽  
G. Molle ◽  
R. Revilla ◽  
J. F. Roche ◽  
G. Quintans ◽  
...  

The prolonged interval from calving to first ovulation in beef cows is primarily due to the suckling-mediated inhibition of pulsatile LH release. Undernutrition both before and after calving also suppresses LH release, reduces ovarian follicular growth and delays ovulation. The interactive effects of these factors on the interval from calving to first ovulation in beef cows were quantified by studying the incidence of ovulation, following acute calf isolation and once-a-day suckling (restricted access), after emergence of the fourth follicular wave post partum in cows in differing body condition at calving and offered low or high planes of nutrition after calving.The experiment was a 2 x 2 x 2 factorial design, in which the factors were body condition score at calving (Low v. Moderate), feeding level after calving (0.6 v. 1.0 MJ ME/d/kg M0.75), and restricted (once-a-day) v. ad libitum access and suckling. The experiment, duplicated at each of the four participating sites, involved 16 Simmental, 16 Sarda, 16 Brown Swiss and 16 Hereford x Friesian multi-parous cows. Follicle growth was monitored daily from day 21 post partum until the earlier of second ovulation or Day 90 post partum using transrectal ovarian ultrasonography.


1995 ◽  
Vol 61 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. D. Sinclair ◽  
P. J. Broadbent ◽  
J. S. M. Hutchinson

AbstractData from two experiments are reported which test the hypothesis that nutrient and/or dry-matter intake and body condition may interact to modify hypothalamic opioidergic activity and thus influence the pulsatile release of LH during the early post-partum period and during the oestrous cycle. Experiment 1 involved 16 multiparous, twin-suckling beef cows, and was a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial design in which the factors were level of post-partum energy intake (80 v. 130 M) metabolizable energy (ME) per day), the digestible undegradable protein (DUP) content of the post-partum diet (14 v. 31 g/kg dry matter), and treatment with either 200 mg or 400 mg naloxone hydrochloride. Blood samples were collected at 15-min intervals for 4h at weeks 4 and 7 post partum. Naloxone was administered intravenously after the eighth sample. Experiment 2 involved 16 cyclic maiden heifers and was also arranged in a factorial manner, with two levels of body condition at the start of the experimental period (2·50 and 3·16 units) and two levels of energy intake thereafter (40 and 80 MJ ME per day). Seven blood samples were collected at 15-min intervals on 4 days consecutively during the mid-luteal phase of the oestrous cycle. On the first 2 of these 4 days naloxone was administered, whilst on the last 2 days a gonadotropin-releasing hormone agonist (buserelin; GnRH) was administered, both after the fourth sample. Plasma from both experiments was assayed for LH and prolactin (Prl).In experiment 1, cows on 130 MJ ME per day returned to oestrus and ovulated earlier than cows on 80 MJ ME per day (44·5 v. 55·0 days; s.e.d. = 3·93; P < 0·05). At week 4 post partum the proportional increase in plasma LH following naloxone challenge was greater for cows on 130 MJ ME per day than cows on 80 MJ ME per day (1·38 v. 1·12; P < 0·05), but the converse was true at week 7 (1·15 v. 1·68; P < 0·05). Cows on the high DUP diet required a higher dose of naloxone to elicit an LH response. Few heifers in experiment 2 exhibited an LH response to naloxone. In contrast, there were significant dietary treatment effects on the LH response to GnRH (P < 0·01). Relatively thin heifers on 40 MJ ME per day exhibited the lowest proportional increases in plasma LH to GnRH challenge, whereas heifers on 80 MJ ME per day and given the higher dose of GnRH produced the greatest plasma LH responses. Mean Prl concentrations before and after feeding in experiment 2 were respectively 13·2 and 10·2 ng/l (P < 0·01).Suckled cows given a high energy diet during the early post-partum period can overcome the opioid mediated block on LH release and resume oestrous cycles earlier than cows given a low energy diet. LH would appear to be inhibited by a non-opioid mechanism in mid-luteal phase heifers. Total pituitary reserves ofLH may be influenced by the animals nutritional status.


1990 ◽  
Vol 51 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-101 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. A. Wright ◽  
S. M. Rhind ◽  
T. K. Whyte ◽  
A. J. Smith ◽  
S. R. McMillen ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe effect of body condition on hypothalamic and pituitary function in post-partum suckled beef cows was studied. Thirty-eight Blue-Grey cows were calved at a body condition score of either 2·35 (L) or 2·80 (H), fed to maintain live weight and body condition thereafter and ovariectomized at either 5 or 9 weeks post partum. The H cows had higher LH pulse frequencies before ovariectomy (0·36 v. 0·28 pulses per h; P < 0·05) and 15 days after ovariectomy (0·86 v. 0·72 pulses per h; P < 0·01), indicating a direct effect of body condition on GnRH release from the hypothalamus. Body condition had no effect on the ability of the pituitary to release LH in response to a physiological dose (2·5 u.g) of GnRH in entire or ovariectomized cows at 5 or 9 weeks post partum. The magnitude of the increase in circulating levels of LH following GnRH injection was greater at 9 weeks compared with 5 weeks post partum (2·23 v. 1·73 u.g/1; P < 0·001) in entire cows, but there was no difference between 5 and 9 weeks in ovariectomized cows. Following ovariectomy there was a 2·5-fold increase in LH pulse frequency within 15 days and LH pulse frequency approached 1 pulse per h in all treatments groups. It is concluded that both the hypothalamus and the pituitary are capable of functioning normally by 5 weeks post partum in suckled beef cows, that the pulsatile release of GnRH from the hypothalamus is inhibited, possibly due to a very high sensitivity to oestradiol, and that the sensitivity of the pituitary to the negative feedback effect of oestradiol may decrease with time post partum.


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