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  3. Uterine responses to early pre-attachment embryos in the domestic dog and comparisons with other domestic animal species.
 

Uterine responses to early pre-attachment embryos in the domestic dog and comparisons with other domestic animal species.

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BORIS DOI
10.7892/boris.114652
Date of Publication
August 1, 2017
Publication Type
Article
Author
Graubner, Felix R
Gram, Aykut
Kautz, Ewa
Bauersachs, Stefan
Aslan, Selim
Agaoglu, Ali R
Boos, Alois
Kowalewski, Mariusz P
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Biology of reproduction
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
0006-3363
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1093/biolre/iox063
PubMed ID
28651344
Uncontrolled Keywords

dog (Canis lupus fami...

Description
In the dog, there is no luteolysis in the absence of pregnancy. Thus, this species lacks any anti-luteolytic endocrine signal as found in other species that modulate uterine function during the critical period of pregnancy establishment. Nevertheless, in the dog an embryo-maternal communication must occur in order to prevent rejection of embryos. Based on this hypothesis, we performed microarray analysis of canine uterine samples collected during pre-attachment phase (days 10-12) and in corresponding non-pregnant controls, in order to elucidate the embryo attachment signal. An additional goal was to identify differences in uterine responses to pre-attachment embryos between dogs and other mammalian species exhibiting different reproductive patterns with regard to luteolysis, implantation, and preparation for placentation. Therefore, the canine microarray data were compared with gene sets from pigs, cattle, horses, and humans. We found 412 genes differentially regulated between the two experimental groups. The functional terms most strongly enriched in response to pre-attachment embryos related to extracellular matrix function and remodeling, and to immune and inflammatory responses. Several candidate genes were validated by semi-quantitative PCR. When compared with other species, best matches were found with human and equine counterparts. Especially for the pig, the majority of overlapping genes showed opposite expression patterns. Interestingly, 1926 genes did not pair with any of the other gene sets. Using a microarray approach, we report the uterine changes in the dog driven by the presence of embryos and compare these results with datasets from other mammalian species, finding common-, contrary-, and exclusively canine-regulated genes.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/160573
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Graubner_et_al-2017biology of reproduction.pdftextAdobe PDF8.82 MBAttribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0)publishedOpen
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