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The role of the oviduct environment in embryo survival

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journal contribution
posted on 2024-04-12, 02:03 authored by Jenny JuengelJenny Juengel, Karen Reader, Paul MacleanPaul Maclean, Laurel QuirkeLaurel Quirke, Sylvia Zellhuber-McMillan, Neville HaackNeville Haack, Axel HeiserAxel Heiser

Context: Declining fertility is an issue in multiple mammalian species. As the site of fertilisation and early embryo development, the oviduct plays a critical role in embryo survival, yet there is a paucity of information on how the oviduct regulates this process.

Aims: We hypothesised that differences in steroid hormone signalling and/or immune function would be observed in a model of poor embryo survival, the peripubertal ewe.

Methods: We examined expression of steroid hormones in systemic circulation, oviductal expression of oestrogen receptor α and genes important in steroid hormone signalling, and immune function in pregnant and cyclic peripubertal and adult ewes on day 3 after oestrus.

Key results: Concentrations of progesterone, but not oestradiol, were decreased in the peripubertal ewe compared to the adult ewe. Oestrogen receptor α protein expression was increased in the peripubertal ewe, but pathway analysis of gene expression revealed downregulation of the oestrogen signalling pathway compared to the adult ewe. Differential expression of several genes involved in immune function between the peripubertal and adult ewe was consistent with an unfavourable oviductal environment in the peripubertal ewe lamb. Oestradiol concentration was positively correlated with the expression of multiple genes involved in the regulation of immune function.

Conclusions: Differences in the immune environment of the oviduct, potentially linked to differential modulation by steroid hormones, may partially underly the poor fertilisation and early embryo survival observed in the peripubertal ewe.

Implications: A unfavourable oviductal environment may play an important role in limiting reproductive success.

Funding

AgResearch’s Strategic Science Investment Fund from NZ Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment

History

Rights statement

© 2024 The Author(s) (or their employer(s)). Published by CSIRO Publishing. This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons AttributionNonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License (CC BY-NC-ND).

Publication date

2024-02-26

Project number

  • Non revenue

Language

  • English

Does this contain Māori information or data?

  • No

Publisher

CSIRO

Journal title

Reproduction, Fertility and Development

ISSN

1031-3613

Volume/issue number

36

Page numbers

RD23171

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