Searchable, peer-reviewed, open-access proceedings from bioscience and biomedical conferences

bp0005rdr30 | Nutrition-Reproduction Interactions | REDR2002

Interactions between nutrition and ovarian activity in cattle: physiological, cellular and molecular mechanisms

Armstrong DC , Gong JG , Webb JG

The effects of acute changes in dietary intake on ovarian activity can be correlated with changes in circulating concentrations of metabolic hormones including insulin, insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I), growth hormone and leptin. There is no corresponding change in circulating gonadotrophin concentrations and it is proposed that the dietary induced changes in ovarian activity, resulting from acute changes in dietary intake, are a result of direct actions of these metabolic...

bp0004rdr3 | Follicular Development | REDR1998

Molecular mechanisms regulating follicular recruitment and selection

Webb R , Campbell BK , Garverick HA , Gong JG , Gutierrez CG , Armstrong DG

Ovarian follicular growth and development is an integrated process encompassing both extraovarian signals, such as gonadotrophins and metabolic hormones, and intraovarian factors. Follicular development has been classified into gonadotrophin-independent and -dependent phases. In the latter, FSH provides the primary drive for follicular recruitment and LH is required for continued development of follicles to the preovulatory stage. A transient increase in circulating FSH preced...

bp0005rdr7 | Gamete-Somatic Cell Interactions | REDR2002

Mechanisms regulating follicular development and selection of the dominant follicle

Webb R , Nicholas B , Gong JG , Campbell BK , Gutierrez CG , Garverick HA , Armstrong DG

Reproductive function is an integrated process encompassing both extraovarian signals, such as gonadotrophins, and intrafollicular factors, such as locally produced growth factors. Initiation of primordial follicle growth and the early stages of folliculogenesis can occur without gonadotrophins. However, in vivo and in vitro studies indicate that FSH may stimulate the rate of preantral follicle growth and that it can take only 3 months for a primordial follic...