Title of article :
Dietary excesses of urea influence the viability and metabolism of preimplantation sheep embryos and may affect fetal growth among survivors
Author/Authors :
McEvoy، نويسنده , , T.G. and Robinson، نويسنده , , J.J. and Aitken، نويسنده , , R.P. and Findlay، نويسنده , , PA and Robertson، نويسنده , , I.S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages :
20
From page :
71
To page :
90
Abstract :
In the first of two experiments investigating the effect of dietary urea on the survival and metabolism of ovine embryos, 30 Border Leicester × Scottish Blackface ewes received a maintenance diet (milled hay, molasses, minerals, vitamins) with no urea (control, C; n = 10) or with added urea at 15 g (low urea, LU; n = 10) or 30 g (high urea, HU; n = 10) kg−1 feed for a 12 week period. The degraded nitrogen (N) status relative to estimated rumen microbial N requirements was −2, +9 and +20 g per day, respectively. One week after allocation to diets, progesterone priming (12 days) commenced. Ewes received 800 IU of equine chorionic gonadotrophin at progesterone withdrawal, were inseminated 52 h later (Day 0) and embryos were collected from five ewes per group at Day 4 and from five ewes at Day 11. If available, one embryo was returned to each ewe; the rest were cultured in vitro. There was no effect of treatment on progesterone, luteinizing hormone (LH), or time of oestrus onset. C, LU and HU plasma urea (P < 0.001) and ammonia levels (C vs. HU, P < 0.01; LU vs. HU, P < 0.05) differed. Day 4 HU embryos were retarded relative to C and LU embryos. After 3 days of culture, 70%, 66% and 0% of C, LU and HU embryos, respectively, were viable. Mid-term pregnancy rates following transfer were 63%, 43% and 33%. Only one HU lamb (male) was born following embryo transfer; its birthweight (10.1 kg) exceeded that of its C (n = 3; 7.0, 7.0, 7.5 kg) and LU (n = 2; 7.3, 8.2 kg) counterparts (P < 0.025). In the second experiment, C2 (2.5 g urea kg−1; n = 5) and HU2 (30 g kg−1; n = 7) diets which provided similar intakes of degraded N relative to microbial requirements as those for C and HU ewes in Experiment 1 were fed to Border Leicester × Scottish Blackface ewes superovulated with 16 mg of porcine follicle-stimulating hormone. Urea and ammonia levels in utero-oviductal samples were elevated in HU2 ewes (P < 0.05). At collection (Day 3), HU2 embryos used more glucose (P < 0.01) and, following culture, some exhibited up to a 2.8-fold increase in metabolism. clusion, excess rumen degradable N in ewe diets elevates urea and ammonia in plasma and in utero, with an associated increase in embryo mortality. Nevertheless, metabolism appears to be up-regulated in some embryos and, among those that survive, fetal growth appears to be enhanced.
Keywords :
Nutrition , urea , Fetal programming , Embryo metabolism , Ammonia
Journal title :
Animal Reproduction Science
Serial Year :
1997
Journal title :
Animal Reproduction Science
Record number :
1904832
Link To Document :
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