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

bp0007rdr5 | Developmental Processes in Ruminants | REDR2010

Dietary regulation of developmental programming in ruminants: epigenetic modifications in the germline

Sinclair KD , Karamitri A , Gardner DS

Ruminants have been utilised extensively to investigate the developmental origins of health and disease, with the sheep serving as the model species of choice to complement dietary studies in the rat and mouse. Surprisingly few studies, however, have investigated delayed effects of maternal undernutrition during pregnancy on adult offspring health and a consistent phenotype, together with underlying mechanistic pathways, has not emerged. Nevertheless, when broad consideration ...

bp0005rdr28 | Nutrition-Reproduction Interactions | REDR2002

Regulation of nutrient uptake and metabolism in pre-elongation ruminant embryos

Sinclair KD , Rooke JA , McEvoy TG

Our current understanding of pre-elongation embryo metabolism and its regulation by factors both intrinsic to the embryo and present in its immediate environment is limited mainly to studies in rodents and of ruminant embryos that have been cultured in vitro. Energy metabolism in such embryos is initially low and dependent on oxidative phosphorylation for the generation of ATP. The embryo exhibits substrate preference for carboxylic acids, such as pyruvate, during thi...

bp0005rdr13 | Pre-natal Programming of Lifetime Productivity and Health | REDR2002

Consequences of manipulating gametes and embryos of ruminant species

McEvoy TG , Ashworth CJ , Rooke JA , Sinclair KD

During the past 12 years, ruminants have provided a focus for some significant advances in mammalian reproductive biotechnologies. Lambs were the first offspring generated after nuclear transfer of fetal or adult cells to enucleated oocytes, and many calves of pre-determined gender are today the result of commercialized semen sexing. In 1990, the birth of one calf provided living proof that even 'dead' spermatozoa can be paternal, whereas, more recently, a short-lived ...

bp0006rdr27 | Fetal Development | REDR2006

The developmental origins of health and disease: current theories and epigenetic mechanisms

Sinclair KD , Lea RG , Rees WD , Young LE

The retrospective cohort studies of David Barker and colleagues during the late 1980s established the principle that the incidence of certain adult diseases such as stroke, type 2 diabetes and dyslipidaemia may be linked to in utero development. Later termed the "Developmental Origins of Health and Disease (DOHaD)" hypothesis, there have been several more recent attempts to explain this phenomenon. Although a general conceptual framework has been established t...