16 results on '"Scholtz EL"'
Search Results
2. Endometrial nitric oxide synthase activity in mares susceptible or resistant to persistent breeding-induced endometritis and the effect of a specific iNOS inhibitor in vitro
- Author
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Khan, FA, primary, Chenier, TS, additional, Foster, RA, additional, Hewson, J, additional, and Scholtz, EL, additional
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. The Effects of Treatment with N-Acetyl Cysteine on Clinical Signs in Persistent Breeding-Induced Endometritis Susceptible Mares.
- Author
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Caissie MD, Gartley CJ, Scholtz EL, Hewson J, Johnson R, and Chenier T
- Subjects
- Acetylcysteine therapeutic use, Animals, Disease Susceptibility veterinary, Endometrium, Female, Horses, Endometritis drug therapy, Endometritis veterinary, Horse Diseases drug therapy
- Abstract
Persistent breeding-induced endometritis (PBIE) is a major cause of infertility in mares. Endometrial inflammation that persists until embryonic descent ultimately results in early embryonic death. A poor endometrial biopsy grade (IIb or III) has been identified as a risk factor for PBIE. Intrauterine fluid accumulation (>2 cm in depth), pathologic endometrial edema, and elevated intrauterine neutrophil levels are all clinical features of PBIE. Commonly applied treatment options include uterine lavage and oxytocin therapy. N-acetyl cysteine (NAC), a mucolytic used to treat bacterial endometritis in mares, has anti-inflammatory properties and was investigated as a potential treatment for PBIE. A randomized, blinded, cross-over design clinical trial used NAC before breeding in PBIE-susceptible mares (n = 9). Intrauterine infusion of 3.3% NAC was performed 12 hours before insemination, and endometrial cytology and endometrial biopsy samples were obtained at 12 and 60 hours after insemination. Endometrial biopsies were evaluated for the degree of inflammation present. Clinical signs of endometrial edema and intrauterine fluid volumes were assessed by transrectal ultrasound at 12 and then every 24 hours after breeding. Data were analyzed using repeated measures analysis of variance and a Mann Whitney Wilcoxon Test. Treatment with NAC did not improve clinical signs in PBIE-affected mares. However, endometrial biopsies from mares treated with NAC displayed more diffuse and severe neutrophil infiltration than control cycles. Further research using a larger population of mares is required to evaluate the effects of NAC treatment on the endometrium of PBIE-susceptible mares., (Crown Copyright © 2020. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Analysis of the uterine flush fluid proteome of healthy mares and mares with endometritis or fibrotic endometrial degeneration.
- Author
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Diel de Amorim M, Khan FA, Chenier TS, Scholtz EL, and Hayes MA
- Subjects
- Animals, Biomarkers metabolism, Case-Control Studies, Chromatography, Liquid, Endometritis metabolism, Endometritis pathology, Endometrium pathology, Female, Fibrosis, Horse Diseases pathology, Proteomics, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, Diestrus metabolism, Endometritis veterinary, Endometrium metabolism, Estrus metabolism, Horse Diseases metabolism, Horses, Proteome, Therapeutic Irrigation
- Abstract
The objective of this study was to evaluate the differences in the uterine flush fluid proteome between healthy mares and mares with endometritis or fibrotic endometrial degeneration (FED). Uterine flush fluid samples were collected from healthy mares (n=8; oestrus n=5 and dioestrus n=3) and mares with endometritis (n=23; oestrus n=14 and dioestrus n=9) or FED (n=7; oestrus n=6 and dioestrus n=1). Proteomic analysis was performed using label-free liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Of 216 proteins identified during oestrus, 127 were common to all three groups, one protein was exclusively detected in healthy mares, 47 proteins were exclusively detected in mares with endometritis and four proteins were exclusively detected in mares with FED. Of 188 proteins identified during dioestrus, 113 proteins were common between healthy mares and mares with endometritis, eight proteins were exclusively detected in healthy mares and 67 proteins were exclusively detected in mares with endometritis. Quantitative analysis revealed a subset of proteins differing in abundance between the three groups during oestrus and between healthy mares and mares with endometritis during dioestrus. These results provide a springboard for evaluation of specific proteins as biomarkers of uterine health and disease and for investigation of their roles in the establishment and maintenance of pregnancy.
- Published
- 2020
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5. Concentrations of sulphated estrone, estradiol and dehydroepiandrosterone measured by mass spectrometry in pregnant mares.
- Author
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Legacki EL, Scholtz EL, Ball BA, Esteller-Vico A, Stanley SD, and Conley AJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Dehydroepiandrosterone metabolism, Estradiol blood, Estrone blood, Estrone metabolism, Female, Mass Spectrometry methods, Pregnancy, Dehydroepiandrosterone blood, Estradiol metabolism, Estrone analogs & derivatives, Horses blood, Mass Spectrometry veterinary, Pregnancy, Animal blood
- Abstract
Background: Few studies have provided a longitudinal analysis of systemic concentrations of conjugated oestrogens (and androgens) throughout pregnancy in mares, and those only using immunoassay. The use of liquid chromatography tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) will provide more accurate concentrations of circulating conjugated steroids., Objectives: To characterise circulating concentrations of individual conjugated steroids throughout equine gestation by using LC-MS/MS., Study Design: Longitudinal study and comparison of pregnant mares treated with vehicle or letrozole in late gestation., Methods: Sulphated oestrogens and androgens were measured in mares throughout gestation and mares in late gestation (8-11 months) treated with vehicle or letrozole to inhibit oestrogen synthesis in late gestation. An analytical method was developed using LC-MS/MS to evaluate sulphated estrone, estradiol, testosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEAS) during equine gestation., Results: Estrone sulphate concentrations peaked by week 26 at almost 60 μg/mL, 50-fold higher than have been reported in studies using immunoassays. An increase in DHEAS was detected from 7 to 9 weeks of gestation, but concentrations remained consistently low (if detected) for the remainder of gestation and testosterone sulphate was undetectable at any stage. Estradiol sulphate concentrations were highly correlated with estrone sulphate but were a fraction of their level. Concentrations of both oestrogen sulphates decreased from their peak to parturition. Letrozole inhibited estrone and estradiol sulphate concentrations at 9.25 and 10.5 months of gestation but, no increase in DHEAS was observed., Main Limitations: Limited number of mares sampled and available for analysis, lack of analysis of 5α-reduced and B-ring unsaturated steroids due to lack of available standards., Conclusions: Dependent on methods of extraction and chromatography, and the specificity of primary antisera, immunoassays may underestimate oestrogen conjugate concentrations in blood from pregnant mares and may detect androgen conjugates (neither testosterone sulphate nor DHEAS were detected here by LC-MS/MS) that probably peak coincident with oestrogen conjugates between 6 and 7 months of equine gestation., (© 2019 EVJ Ltd.)
- Published
- 2019
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6. A comparison of the uterine proteome of mares in oestrus and dioestrus.
- Author
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Maloney SE, Khan FA, Chenier TS, Diel de Amorim M, Anthony Hayes M, and Scholtz EL
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Horses, Proteomics, Estrus metabolism, Proteome metabolism, Uterus metabolism
- Abstract
Proteomic analysis of mare uterine flush fluid provides a minimally invasive technique for studying protein changes associated with the oestrous cycle. The aim of this study was to identify differentially abundant proteins in the uterine flush fluid of mares in oestrus and dioestrus. In this study, uterine flush fluid samples were collected from eight reproductively healthy mares in either oestrus (n = 5) or dioestrus (n = 3). Proteomic analysis was performed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. Of 172 proteins identified, six proteins (immunoglobulin lambda-like polypeptide 1, haemoglobin subunit alpha, alpha-1B-glycoprotein, serotransferrin, apolipoprotein A-1, and haemoglobin subunit beta) were significantly more abundant in oestrus. These proteins may contribute to the endometrial defence system through roles in inflammation, immunity or antimicrobial activity. In other species, some of these proteins have been described as immunoglobulins, negative acute phase proteins or defence agents against micro-organisms. During dioestrus, immunoglobulin alpha-1 chain C region-related, complement factor I, CD 109 antigen and uterocalin, were significantly more abundant. Research in other species suggests that these four proteins contribute to the immune response through proposed immunoregulatory characteristics, complement system involvement or roles in B cell-T cell interactions. In conclusion, ten differentially abundant proteins were identified in the uterine flush fluid of mares in oestrus and dioestrus. Targeted studies on these proteins could elucidate their role in uterine defence mechanisms during the oestrous cycle in the mare., (© 2018 Blackwell Verlag GmbH.)
- Published
- 2019
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7. Short communication: The effect of calcium supplementation at calving on neutrophil function.
- Author
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Miltenburg CL, Duffield TF, Bienzle D, Scholtz EL, and LeBlanc SJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Calcium pharmacology, Canada, Female, Lactation, Milk, Pregnancy, Quebec, Calcium administration & dosage, Cattle immunology, Neutrophils physiology
- Abstract
Low total blood calcium concentration after calving has been demonstrated to be a risk factor for reduced neutrophil function. The objective of this study was to evaluate whether administration of an injectable calcium supplement product soon after calving increased neutrophil oxidative burst or phagocytosis capacity. Cows (n = 27) from 4 farms were blocked by parity and randomly assigned to receive either calcium gluconate (35% wt/vol) in combination with calcium glucoheptonate (10% wt/vol; Theracalcium, Vétoquinol Canada Inc., Lavaltrie, Quebec, Canada) or a placebo within 12 h after calving and again 24 h later. Each dose of 120 mL was injected subcutaneously over 2 sites. Total serum calcium concentration, neutrophil oxidative burst, and neutrophil phagocytosis capacity were measured from coccygeal blood samples before (time 0) and 72 h after first treatment. There was no difference between treatment groups in lactation number, total calcium concentration, oxidative burst, or phagocytosis at time of enrollment. There was no effect of treatment on oxidative burst or phagocytosis by neutrophils. This preliminary study does not support an effect of supplemental calcium to improve neutrophil oxidative burst or phagocytosis capacity of low-parity parturient cows., (Copyright © 2018 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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8. 5α-dihydroprogesterone concentrations and synthesis in non-pregnant mares.
- Author
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Conley AJ, Scholtz EL, Legacki EL, Corbin CJ, Knych HK, Dujovne GD, Ball BA, Moeller BC, and Stanley SD
- Subjects
- 5-alpha-Dihydroprogesterone analysis, Animals, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, Estrous Cycle blood, Female, Horses, Liver metabolism, Metabolic Networks and Pathways, Pregnancy, Progesterone metabolism, 5-alpha-Dihydroprogesterone biosynthesis, 5-alpha-Dihydroprogesterone blood
- Abstract
In vivo and in vitro evidence indicates that the bioactive, 5α-reduced progesterone metabolite, 5α-dihydroprogesterone (DHP) is synthesized in the placenta, supporting equine pregnancy, but its appearance in early pregnancy argues for other sites of synthesis also. It remains unknown if DHP circulates at relevant concentrations in cyclic mares and, if so, does synthesis involve the non-pregnant uterus? Jugular blood was drawn daily from cyclic mares ( n = 5). Additionally, ovariectomized mares (OVX) and geldings were administered progesterone (300 mg) intramuscularly. Blood was drawn before and after treatment. Incubations of whole equine blood and hepatic microsomes with progesterone were also investigated for evidence of DHP synthesis. Sample analysis for progesterone, DHP and other steroids employed validated liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry methods. Progesterone and DHP appeared a day (d) after ovulation in cyclic mares, was increased significantly by d3, peaking from d5 to 10 and decreased from d13 to 17. DHP was 55.5 ± 3.2% of progesterone concentrations throughout the cycle and was highly correlated with it. DHP was detected immediately after progesterone administration to OVX mares and geldings, maintaining a relatively constant ratio with progesterone (47.2 ± 2.9 and 51.2 ± 2.7%, respectively). DHP was barely detectable in whole blood and hepatic microsome incubations. We conclude that DHP is a physiologically relevant progestogen in cyclic, non-pregnant mares, likely stimulating the uterus, and that it is synthesized peripherally from luteal progesterone but not in the liver or blood. The presence of DHP in pregnant perissodactyla as well as proboscidean species suggests horses may be a valuable model for reproductive endocrinology in other exotic taxa., (© 2018 Society for Endocrinology.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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9. The effect of prepartum feeding and lying space on metabolic health and immune function.
- Author
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Miltenburg CL, Duffield TF, Bienzle D, Scholtz EL, and LeBlanc SJ
- Subjects
- Animals, Behavior, Animal, Blood Chemical Analysis veterinary, Cattle blood, Cattle immunology, Female, Floors and Floorcoverings, Neutrophils immunology, Parity, Phagocytosis, Population Density, Pregnancy, Respiratory Burst, Animal Welfare, Cattle physiology, Housing, Animal, Peripartum Period, Reproduction
- Abstract
The determinants of metabolic and reproductive health disorders in the peripartum period and the degree to which feeding and lying space and management can influence health are only partially understood. The objective of this randomized controlled study was to determine whether providing noncompetitive feeding and lying access in the close-up dry period improves health and immune function. Forty-eight Holstein cows of all parities were randomly assigned to a treatment group of 6 to 10 cows in 1 pen with either 80% cows to stalls and 90 cm of feeding space per cow (understocked) or 120% stocking density and 45 cm of feeding space per cow (overstocked) for 3 wk before expected calving. All cows wore electronic data loggers to monitor daily standing and lying time. Video recordings representing d 7 to 9 after group formation were reviewed, and a competition index (C_Ind) was calculated for each cow by dividing the number of times a cow displaced another as an actor by its total number of actor and reactor displacements. Cows were categorized as high success (C_Ind ≥0.6), moderate success (0.4 ≤ C_Ind <0.6), or low success (C_Ind <0.4). Weekly blood samples measured nonesterified fatty acids, β-hydroxybutyrate, calcium, glucose, albumin, aspartate aminotransferase, bilirubin, haptoglobin, insulin, and insulin-like growth factor-1 from 3 wk before to 5 wk after calving. Measures of innate immune function (neutrophil phagocytosis and oxidative burst) were assessed at -2, -1, 1, 2, 3, and 5 wk relative to calving. Liver biopsies were collected at wk 1 and 3. Cows in the understocked group spent significantly more time per day lying; the back-transformed least squares means and 95% confidence interval were 14.8 h (13.9-15.6) versus 12.8 h (12.0-13.7). Controlling for parity, there was no difference between treatments in β-hydroxybutyrate, nonesterified fatty acids, glucose, insulin, insulin-like growth factor 1, aspartate aminotransferase, bilirubin, or haptoglobin concentrations. Throughout the study, cows in the understocked treatment had higher mean calcium and tended to have higher albumin and at 3 wk after calving tended to have lower mean liver triacylglycerol content. Overall, there was no treatment effect on phagocytosis, but cows with a higher C_Ind in the understocked treatment group had greater oxidative burst function. There was no effect of treatment on endometritis. Despite increased competition and lower lying time, the expected harmful effects of crowding and competition on metabolic indicators and innate immune function were mostly not observed. Although this does not refute the importance of access to feeding and lying space, these results indicate that metabolic and reproductive health is more complex than can be explained solely by exposure to what are understood to be best practices for space allowances., (Copyright © 2018 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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10. Inhibin-A and inhibin-B in cyclic and pregnant mares, and mares with granulosa-theca cell tumors: Physiological and diagnostic implications.
- Author
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Conley AJ, Scholtz EL, Dujovne G, Cotterman RF, Legacki EL, Uliani RC, Alvarenga MA, Ball BA, Kalra B, Savjani GV, and Kumar A
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Animals, Anti-Mullerian Hormone blood, Female, Horses metabolism, Pregnancy, Reference Values, Horses physiology, Inhibins blood, Pregnancy, Animal metabolism
- Abstract
Studies in mares have examined serum inhibin concentrations using immuno-assays unable to distinguish dimeric inhibin-A from inhibin-B isoforms. Inhibin-A and inhibin-B immuno-assays were used to investigate concentrations in cyclic mares, young and old (6 vs 19 years old, respectively) mares following hemi-ovariectomy, mares during pregnancy and in mares with confirmed granulosa cell tumors (GCTs). Mares with inter-ovulatory intervals of 26 days had ovulatory peaks of inhibin-A averaging 80 pg/mL with a mid-cycle nadir of 5 pg/mL. Inhibin-A and inhibin-B concentrations were highly correlated (r = + 0.79, P < 0.01) though peak and nadir concentrations of inhibin-B were not significantly different. However, the ratio of inhibin-A to inhibin-B (A/B) changed significantly through the cycle, highest at ovulation and <1 (more inhibin-B than -A) at mid-cycle. Two mares with grossly extended inter-ovulatory intervals demonstrated mid-cycle inhibin-A (and inhibin-B) excursions suggestive of follicular waves. Follicle-stimulating hormone was negatively correlated with inhibin-A and -B concentrations in all 6 mares. Hemi-ovariectomy in young mares resulted in a significant decrease in inhibin-A and inhibin-B concentrations one day later (P < 0.05) but older mares did not, suggesting a possible extra-ovarian source(s) of these hormones. Both inhibin isoforms dropped to very low levels during pregnancy (P < 0.0001), inhibin-A (P < 0.0001) more rapidly than -B (P < 0.05), so that inhibin-B became the predominant measured form throughout most of gestation (P < 0.05). Mares with confirmed GCTs had elevated inhibin-B concentrations more reliably than inhibin-A but neither inhibin-A or -B was correlated with anti-Müllerian hormone concentrations. Collectively, concentrations of inhibin-A and -B were aligned with physiological events in healthy mares, though more pronounced cyclic changes were seen with inhibin-A. Inhibin-B concentrations were significantly associated with GCTs (P < 0.01), inhibin-A concentrations were not. While both inhibin-A and -B concentrations track physiological events such as cyclic follicular activity, only inhibin-B concentrations effectively signal ovarian neoplasia in mares., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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11. Dose-dependent inhibition of uterine contractility by nitric oxide: A potential mechanism underlying persistent breeding-induced endometritis in the mare.
- Author
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Khan FA, Chenier TS, Murrant CL, Foster RA, Hewson J, and Scholtz EL
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- Animals, Dose-Response Relationship, Drug, Endometritis etiology, Endometritis physiopathology, Female, Horse Diseases etiology, Myometrium drug effects, Myometrium physiopathology, Penicillamine analogs & derivatives, Penicillamine pharmacology, Pregnancy, S-Nitroso-N-Acetylpenicillamine pharmacology, Uterus drug effects, Uterus physiopathology, Endometritis veterinary, Horse Diseases physiopathology, Horses physiology, Nitric Oxide metabolism, Nitric Oxide Donors pharmacology, Uterine Contraction drug effects
- Abstract
Nitric oxide (NO) may have a role in persistent breeding-induced endometritis in mares through an inhibitory effect on uterine contractility. The objectives of this study were to test the effect of NO on spontaneous uterine contractility in-vitro and to evaluate whether this effect varied between the longitudinal and circular muscle layers of the uterus. Reproductive tracts were collected from eight euthanized non-pregnant mares (age 4-19 years; body weight 405-530 kg). Transrectal examination of the reproductive tract was performed before euthanasia to evaluate stage of the estrous cycle and presence of any apparent abnormality. After euthanasia, one uterine tissue sample was collected for histological evaluation and four full-thickness uterine tissue strips (10-12 mm × 2 mm), two parallel to each muscle layer, were excised for in-vitro contractility evaluation. Strips were suspended in tissue chambers containing Krebs-Henseleit solution, with continuous aeration (95% O
2 -5% CO2 ; pH 7.4) at 37 °C. After equilibration, spontaneous contractility was recorded (pre-treatment) and strips excised in each direction were randomly allocated to each of two groups: 1) SNAP (S-nitroso-N-acetylpenicillamine, an NO donor); or 2) NAP (N-acetyl-d-penicillamine, vehicle and time-matched control). These were treated at 15 min intervals with increasing concentrations (10-7 M to 10-3 M) of SNAP and NAP, respectively. Contractility data was recorded throughout the experiment. An interaction effect of group-by-concentration was observed (P < 0.0001). The mean contractility after treatment with 10-4 M and 10-3 M SNAP were significantly lower than the pre-treatment contractility and the mean contractility after treatment with lower SNAP concentrations. In contrast, contractility did not change significantly in the NAP treated controls. The effect of treatment on uterine contractility was not influenced by age or weight of the mare, stage of estrous cycle, uterine histology grade, or muscle layer. Secondary findings included significant main effects of stage of estrous cycle (increased contractility in estrus compared to diestrus), uterine histology grade (decreased contractility in grade IIB compared to grade I) and age (decreased contractility in mares aged > 8 years compared to mares aged ≤ 8 years). In conclusion, results of this study indicate that NO has a dose-dependent inhibitory effect on spontaneous uterine contractility irrespective of the muscle layer in the mare., (Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2017
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12. Randomized clinical trial of a calcium supplement for improvement of health in dairy cows in early lactation.
- Author
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Miltenburg CL, Duffield TF, Bienzle D, Scholtz EL, and LeBlanc SJ
- Subjects
- 3-Hydroxybutyric Acid blood, Animals, Cattle, Female, Lactation drug effects, Milk, Reproduction drug effects, Calcium blood, Cattle Diseases epidemiology
- Abstract
Prophylactic Ca supplementation immediately after calving is a common strategy to prevent clinical and subclinical hypocalcemia in parturient dairy cows. The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of prophylactic administration of an injected Ca supplement on blood Ca concentration at 24 and 48h after treatment, incidence risk of clinical disease and culling, milk production in early lactation, and probability of pregnancy at first insemination. Cows without signs of visible milk fever (n=984) from 7 farms were blocked by parity and randomly assigned to receive either Ca gluconate (35% wt/vol) in combination with Ca glucoheptonate (10% wt/vol; TheraCalcium, Vétoquinol Canada Inc., Lavaltrie, Quebec) or a placebo (medication vehicle solution with no Ca) at first contact with each cow after calving and again 12 to 24h later. Each dose was 120mL injected subcutaneously over 2 sites. Total serum Ca concentration (tCa) was measured from coccygeal blood samples before (time 0) and 24 and 48h after first treatment in a subsample of cows (n=129). Blood β-hydroxybutyrate concentrations were measured from all cows twice between 3 and 16d in milk at weekly visits and cows were evaluated for vaginal discharge once between 28 and 42d in milk. Disease events, production data from the first 3 Dairy Herd Improvement milk tests, reproduction, and culling data were collected from each herd. For cows that had received 1 injection of Ca before the blood sample at 24h (n=95), tCa was significantly higher in the treated cows: mean ± standard error, 2.03±0.03 versus 1.90±0.03mmol/L, accounting for tCa at time of enrollment and a treatment by tCa at enrollment interaction. At 48h, no significant difference was found in tCa between treatment and control (mean ± SE, 2.12±0.02 and 2.10±0.03mmol/L, respectively). Cows treated with the Ca product were significantly less likely to have received intravenous, subcutaneous, or oral supplemental Ca for exhibiting clinical signs of hypocalcemia than control cows (5.0 vs. 8.4%). No effect was found of treatment on retained placenta, metritis, hyperketonemia, prevalence of purulent vaginal discharge, culling from the herd, early lactation production, probability of pregnancy to first artificial insemination, or time to pregnancy. With this subcutaneous prophylactic Ca treatment regimen, blood Ca levels were temporarily increased at 24h after treatment, but no effect was observed of supplemental Ca on the risk of disease or culling, milk production, or reproductive performance., (Copyright © 2016 American Dairy Science Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
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13. The dynamic steroid landscape of equine pregnancy mapped by mass spectrometry.
- Author
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Legacki EL, Scholtz EL, Ball BA, Stanley SD, Berger T, and Conley AJ
- Subjects
- 20-alpha-Dihydroprogesterone metabolism, Animals, Biomarkers metabolism, Chromatography, Liquid, Female, Horses, Pregnancy, Pregnanolone metabolism, Pregnenolone metabolism, Progesterone metabolism, Corpus Luteum metabolism, Placenta metabolism, Pregnancy, Animal, Steroids metabolism, Tandem Mass Spectrometry methods
- Abstract
Liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) allowed comprehensive analysis of various steroids detectable in plasma throughout equine gestation. Mares (n=9) were bled serially until they foaled. Certain steroids dominated the profile at different stages of gestation, clearly defining key physiological and developmental transitions. The period (weeks 6-20) coincident with equine chorionic gonadotropic (eCG) stimulation of primary corpora lutea and subsequent formation of secondary luteal structures was defined by increased progesterone, 17OH-progesterone and androstenedione, all Δ4 steroids. The 5α-reduced metabolite of progesterone, dihydroprogesterone (DHP) paralleled progesterone secretion at less than half the concentration until week 12 of gestation when progesterone began to decline but DHP concentrations continued to increase. DHP exceeded progesterone concentrations by week 16, clearly defining the luteo-placental shift in pregnane synthesis from primarily ovarian to primarily placental. The period corresponding to the growth of fetal gonads was defined by increasing dehydroepiandrosterone and pregnenolone (Δ5 steroids) concentrations from week 14, peaking at week 34 and declining to term. Metabolites of DHP (including allopregnanolone) dominated the steroid profile in late gestation, some exceeding DHP by weeks 13 or 14 and near term by almost tenfold. Thus Δ4 steroids dominated during ovarian stimulation by eCG, inversion of the ratio of progesterone: DHP (increasing 5α-pregnanes) marked the luteo-placental shift, Δ5 steroids defined fetal gonadal growth and 5α-reduced metabolites of DHP dominated the steroid profile in mid- to late-gestation. Comprehensive LC-MS/MS steroid analysis provides opportunities to better monitor the physiology and the progress of equine pregnancies, including fetal development., (© 2016 Society for Reproduction and Fertility.)
- Published
- 2016
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14. Pregnancy without progesterone in horses defines a second endogenous biopotent progesterone receptor agonist, 5α-dihydroprogesterone.
- Author
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Scholtz EL, Krishnan S, Ball BA, Corbin CJ, Moeller BC, Stanley SD, McDowell KJ, Hughes AL, McDonnell DP, and Conley AJ
- Subjects
- 5-alpha-Dihydroprogesterone blood, Analysis of Variance, Animals, Base Sequence, Chromatography, High Pressure Liquid, Female, Horses, Humans, Immunohistochemistry, Molecular Sequence Data, Progesterone blood, Progesterone metabolism, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction, Receptors, Progesterone metabolism, Reverse Transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Species Specificity, Tandem Mass Spectrometry, 3-Oxo-5-alpha-Steroid 4-Dehydrogenase genetics, 5-alpha-Dihydroprogesterone metabolism, Pregnancy metabolism, Receptors, Progesterone agonists
- Abstract
One of the most widely accepted axioms of mammalian reproductive biology is that pregnancy requires the (sole) support of progesterone, acting in large measure through nuclear progesterone receptors (PRs) in uterine and cervical tissues, without which pregnancy cannot be established or maintained. However, mares lack detectable progesterone in the latter half of pregnancy. Instead of progesterone, several (mainly 5α-reduced) pregnanes are elevated and have long been speculated to provide progestational support in lieu of progesterone itself. To the authors' knowledge, evidence for the bioactivity of a second potent endogenously synthesized pregnane able to support pregnancy in the absence of progesterone has never before been reported. The 5α-reduced progesterone metabolite dihydroprogesterone (DHP) was shown in vivo to stimulate endometrial growth and progesterone-dependent gene expression in the horse at subphysiological concentrations and to maintain equine pregnancy in the absence of luteal progesterone in the third and fourth weeks postbreeding. Results of in vitro studies indicate that DHP is an equally potent and efficacious endogenous progestin in the horse but that the PR evolved with increased agonistic potency for DHP at the expense of potency toward progesterone based on comparisons with human PR responses. Sequence analysis and available literature indicate that the enzyme responsible for DHP synthesis, 5α-reductase type 1, also adapted primarily to metabolize progesterone and thereby to serve diverse roles in the physiology of pregnancy in mammals. Our confirmation that endogenously synthesized DHP is a biopotent progestin in the horse ends decades of speculation, explaining how equine pregnancies survive without measurable circulating progesterone in the last 4 to 5 mo of gestation.
- Published
- 2014
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15. Biological and clinical significance of anti-Müllerian hormone determination in blood serum of the mare.
- Author
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Almeida J, Ball BA, Conley AJ, Place NJ, Liu IK, Scholtz EL, Mathewson L, Stanley SD, and Moeller BC
- Subjects
- Animals, Anti-Mullerian Hormone chemistry, Biomarkers, Tumor blood, Cyst Fluid chemistry, Estrous Cycle blood, Female, Gene Expression Regulation, Granulosa Cell Tumor blood, Granulosa Cell Tumor metabolism, Horses, Immunoblotting veterinary, Immunoenzyme Techniques methods, Immunoenzyme Techniques veterinary, Immunohistochemistry, Ovariectomy veterinary, Ovulation physiology, Pregnancy, Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction veterinary, Receptors, Peptide genetics, Receptors, Peptide metabolism, Receptors, Transforming Growth Factor beta genetics, Receptors, Transforming Growth Factor beta metabolism, Reproducibility of Results, Anti-Mullerian Hormone blood, Granulosa Cell Tumor veterinary, Horse Diseases blood
- Abstract
Anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), a member of the transforming growth factor β superfamily of growth and differentiation factors, is expressed in granulosa cells of preantral and small antral ovarian follicles. In humans, AMH appeared to regulate recruitment and growth of small ovarian follicles. Furthermore, circulating AMH concentrations were elevated in women with granulosa-cell tumors (GCT). In the horse, GCTs are the most common tumor of the ovary, and a variety of endocrine assays have been used to diagnose presumptive GCTs. The objectives of the present study were to validate a heterologous enzyme immunoassay for determination of serum AMH in the horse, and to determine concentrations of AMH in the blood of mares during the estrous cycle, pregnancy, and in mares with granulosa-cell tumors. Mares with normal estrous cycles (n = 6) and pregnant mares (n = 6) had blood samples collected throughout one interovulatory period and monthly throughout gestation, respectively. Mares diagnosed with GCT had blood samples taken before (n = 11) and after ovariectomy (n = 5). Tumors were sectioned and fixed for immunohistochemistry and snap frozen for immunoblot analyses and RT-qPCR. In normal cyclic mares and in pregnant mares, there was no effect of cycle stage or month of gestation on serum AMH concentrations. In GCT mares, serum concentrations of AMH (1901.4 ± 1144.6 ng/mL) were higher than those in cyclic (0.96 ± 0.08 ng/mL) or pregnant (0.72 ± 0.05 ng/mL) mares and decreased after tumor removal. Both AMH and AMH receptor (AMHR2) immunolabeling and expression were detected by immunohistochemistry in the tumor and cyst fluid obtained from mares with GCTs. Therefore, we concluded that AMH was a useful biomarker for detection of granulosa-cell tumors in mares., (Copyright © 2011 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2011
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16. Equine sperm membrane phase behavior: the effects of lipid-based cryoprotectants.
- Author
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Ricker JV, Linfor JJ, Delfino WJ, Kysar P, Scholtz EL, Tablin F, Crowe JH, Ball BA, and Meyers SA
- Subjects
- Animals, Cell Membrane metabolism, Cryoprotective Agents chemistry, Egg Yolk chemistry, Female, Horses, Lipids chemistry, Lipids pharmacology, Male, Microscopy, Electron, Scanning, Phosphatidylcholines chemistry, Phosphatidylcholines pharmacology, Pregnancy, Pregnancy Rate, Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared, Sperm Motility, Spermatozoa cytology, Spermatozoa drug effects, Cell Membrane drug effects, Cryopreservation methods, Cryoprotective Agents pharmacology, Semen Preservation methods, Spermatozoa physiology
- Abstract
The plasma membrane of sperm can undergo lipid phase separation during freezing, resulting in irreversible damage to the cell. The objective of our study was to examine the membrane phase behavior of equine spermatozoa in the absence and presence of lipid-based cryoprotectants. Biophysical properties of sperm membranes were investigated with Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy. Compared to fresh untreated sperm, postthaw untreated sperm showed extensive lipid phase separation and rearrangement. In contrast, postthaw sperm that were cryopreserved in egg phosphatidylcholine (egg PC)- or soy phosphatidylcholine (soy PC)-based diluents showed similar lipid phase behavior to that of fresh, untreated sperm. Studies with a deuterium-labeled PC lipid (POPCd-31) suggest that exogenous lipid from the diluents are strongly associated with the sperm membrane, and scanning electron microscopy images of treated sperm show the presence of lipid aggregates on the membrane surface. Thus, the exogenous lipid does not appear to be integrated into the sperm membrane after cryopreservation. When compared to a standard egg-yolk-based diluent (INRA 82), the soy and egg PC media preserved viability and motility equally well in postthaw sperm. A preliminary fertility study determined that sperm cryopreserved in the soy PC-based medium were capable of fertilization at the same rate as sperm frozen in the conventional INRA 82 medium. Our results show that pure lipid-based diluents can prevent membrane damage during cryopreservation and perform as well as a standard egg-yolk-based diluent in preserving sperm viability, motility, and fertility.
- Published
- 2006
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