32 research outputs found

    Milk-borne relaxin and reproductive system development

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    A window of opportunity for maternal programming of neonatal development is open in the first few days of life as a consequence of nursing. Colostrum (first milk) supports neonatal development by providing a conduit for delivery of milk-borne bioactive factors, exemplified by relaxin, from mother to offspring as proposed in the lactocrine hypothesis. Relaxin, a prototypical milk-borne bioactive factor, is detectable in colostrum from multiple species, including the pig. Thus, relaxin serves as a model for understanding lactocrine signals that support development of neonatal tissues

    Neonatal lactocrine deficiency affects the adult porcine endometrial transcriptome at pregnancy day 13

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    Reproductive performance of female pigs that do not receive sufficient colostrum from birth is permanently impaired. Whether lactocrine deficiency, reflected by low serum immunoglobulin immunocrit (iCrit), affects patterns of endometrial gene expression during the periattachment period of early pregnancy is unknown. Here, objectives were to determine effects of low iCrit at birth on the adult endometrial transcriptome on pregnancy day (PxD) 13. On the first day of postnatal life, gilts were assigned to high or low iCrit groups. Adult high (n = 8) and low (n = 7) iCrit gilts were bred (PxD 0), and humanely slaughtered on PxD 13 when tissues and fluids were collected. The endometrial transcriptome was defined for each group using mRNAseq and microRNAseq. Reads were mapped to the Sus scrofa 11.1 genome build. Mature microRNAs were annotated using miRBase 21. Differential expression was defined based on fold change (ā‰„ Ā±1.5). Lactocrine deficiency did not affect corpora lutea number, uterine horn length, uterine wet weight, conceptus recovery, or uterine luminal fluid estrogen content on PxD 13. However, mRNAseq revealed 1157 differentially expressed endometrial mRNAs in high versus low iCrit gilts. Differentially expressed genes had functions related to solute transport, endometrial receptivity, and immune response. Six differentially expressed endometrial microRNAs included five predicted to target 62 differentially expressed mRNAs, affecting similar biological processes. Thus, lactocrine deficiency on the first day of postnatal life can alter uterine developmental trajectory with lasting effects on endometrial responses to pregnancy as reflected at the level of the transcriptome on PxD 13

    Neonatal lactocrine deficiency affects the adult porcine endometrial transcriptome at pregnancy day 13

    Get PDF
    Reproductive performance of female pigs that do not receive sufficient colostrum from birth is permanently impaired. Whether lactocrine deficiency, reflected by low serum immunoglobulin immunocrit (iCrit), affects patterns of endometrial gene expression during the periattachment period of early pregnancy is unknown. Here, objectives were to determine effects of low iCrit at birth on the adult endometrial transcriptome on pregnancy day (PxD) 13. On the first day of postnatal life, gilts were assigned to high or low iCrit groups. Adult high (n = 8) and low (n = 7) iCrit gilts were bred (PxD 0), and humanely slaughtered on PxD 13 when tissues and fluids were collected. The endometrial transcriptome was defined for each group using mRNAseq and microRNAseq. Reads were mapped to the Sus scrofa 11.1 genome build. Mature microRNAs were annotated using miRBase 21. Differential expression was defined based on fold change (ā‰„ Ā±1.5). Lactocrine deficiency did not affect corpora lutea number, uterine horn length, uterine wet weight, conceptus recovery, or uterine luminal fluid estrogen content on PxD 13. However, mRNAseq revealed 1157 differentially expressed endometrial mRNAs in high versus low iCrit gilts. Differentially expressed genes had functions related to solute transport, endometrial receptivity, and immune response. Six differentially expressed endometrial microRNAs included five predicted to target 62 differentially expressed mRNAs, affecting similar biological processes. Thus, lactocrine deficiency on the first day of postnatal life can alter uterine developmental trajectory with lasting effects on endometrial responses to pregnancy as reflected at the level of the transcriptome on PxD 13

    Activation of Penile Proadipogenic Peroxisome Proliferator-Activated Receptor Ī³ with an Estrogen: Interaction with Estrogen Receptor Alpha during Postnatal Development

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    Exposure to the estrogen receptor alpha (ERĪ±) ligand diethylstilbesterol (DES) between neonatal days 2 to 12 induces penile adipogenesis and adult infertility in rats. The objective of this study was to investigate the in vivo interaction between DES-activated ERĪ± and the proadipogenic transcription factor peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARĪ³). Transcripts for PPARs Ī±, Ī², and Ī³ and Ī³1a splice variant were detected in Sprague-Dawley normal rat penis with PPARĪ³ predominating. In addition, PPARĪ³1b and PPARĪ³2 were newly induced by DES. The PPARĪ³ transcripts were significantly upregulated with DES and reduced by antiestrogen ICI 182, 780. At the cellular level, PPARĪ³ protein was detected in urethral transitional epithelium and stromal, endothelial, neuronal, and smooth muscular cells. Treatment with DES activated ERĪ± and induced adipocyte differentiation in corpus cavernosum penis. Those adipocytes exhibited strong nuclear PPARĪ³ expression. These results suggest a biological overlap between PPARĪ³ and ERĪ± and highlight a mechanism for endocrine disruption

    Signaling in Secret: Pay-for-Performance and the Incentive and Sorting Effects of Pay Secrecy

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    Key Findings: Pay secrecy adversely impacts individual task performance because it weakens the perception that an increase in performance will be accompanied by increase in pay; Pay secrecy is associated with a decrease in employee performance and retention in pay-for-performance systems, which measure performance using relative (i.e., peer-ranked) criteria rather than an absolute scale (see Figure 2 on page 5); High performing employees tend to be most sensitive to negative pay-for- performance perceptions; There are many signals embedded within HR policies and practices, which can influence employeesā€™ perception of workplace uncertainty/inequity and impact their performance and turnover intentions; and When pay transparency is impractical, organizations may benefit from introducing partial pay openness to mitigate these effects on employee performance and retention

    Human milk: From complex tailored nutrition to bioactive impact on child cognition and behavior

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    Human milk is a highly complex liquid food tailor-made to match an infant's needs. Beyond documented positive effects of breastfeeding on infant and maternal health, there is increasing evidence that milk constituents also impact child neurodevelopment. Non-nutrient milk bioactives would contribute to the (long-term) development of child cognition and behavior, a process termed 'Lactocrine Programming'. In this review we discuss the current state of the field on human milk composition and its links with child cognitive and behavioral development. To promote state-of-the-art methodologies and designs that facilitate data pooling and meta-analytic endeavors, we present detailed recommendations and best practices for future studies. Finally, we determine important scientific gaps that need to be filled to advance the field, and discuss innovative directions for future research. Unveiling the mechanisms underlying the links between human milk and child cognition and behavior will deepen our understanding of the broad functions of this complex liquid food, as well as provide necessary information for designing future interventions

    Human milk: From complex tailored nutrition to bioactive impact on child cognition and behavior

    Get PDF
    Human milk is a highly complex liquid food tailor-made to match an infant's needs. Beyond documented positive effects of breastfeeding on infant and maternal health, there is increasing evidence that milk constituents also impact child neurodevelopment. Non-nutrient milk bioactives would contribute to the (long-term) development of child cognition and behavior, a process termed 'Lactocrine Programming'. In this review we discuss the current state of the field on human milk composition and its links with child cognitive and behavioral development. To promote state-of-the-art methodologies and designs that facilitate data pooling and meta-analytic endeavors, we present detailed recommendations and best practices for future studies. Finally, we determine important scientific gaps that need to be filled to advance the field, and discuss innovative directions for future research. Unveiling the mechanisms underlying the links between human milk and child cognition and behavior will deepen our understanding of the broad functions of this complex liquid food, as well as provide necessary information for designing future interventions.All authors participated in the four-day hybrid meeting on ā€˜Lactational Programming: joining forces to optimize research on how maternal milk composition influences child cognition and behaviorā€™ (Zeist, the Netherlands, 16-19 November 2020), which was financed by an Early Career Partnership 2020 Grant of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (awarded to Beijers). Funding sources for individual authors: Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research VICI grant (016.Vici.185.038-to de Weerth), The National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences Clinical Science and Translational Award (UL1TR001863-to Dettmer), NWO Food Cognition and Behaviour (057-14-003-to Korosi), Turku University Foundation, Maire Taponen Foundation and Finnish Psychiatry Foundation (-to Aatsinki), Polish National Science Centre OPUS grant (2015/17/B/NZ8/02436 -to Ziomkiewicz), Canadian Research Chair in Human Nutrition and Metabolism and funding from Natural Science and Engineering Council of Canada NSERC (RGPIN-2017-04746-to Field), The USDA National Institute of Food and Agriculture Hatch Project (1021411-to Slupsky), USDA NRI (2007-35203-18098 and 2013-67016-20523-to Bartol), Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation grant (PID2019-105606RB-I00-to RodrĆ­guez), UC San Diego Chair of Collaborative Human Milk Research, endowed by the Family Larsson-Rosenquist Foundation, Switzerland (-to Bode), Wellcome Trust (220225/Z/20/Z-to Moore), Tier 2 Canada Research Chair and Fellow in the CIFAR Humans and the Microbiome Program, Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR), Research Manitoba, the Canada Foundation for Innovation, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Manitoba Childrenā€™s Hospital Foundation, Prolacta Biosciences, Mitacs, CIFAR, and the Garfield G. Weston Foundation (-to Azad), CIHR Vanier Canada Graduate Scholarship (-to Turner), European Research Council (ERC) under the European Unionā€™s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program (ERC starting grant, no. 639226-to Collado), Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research VENI grant (016.195.197-to Beijers).Peer reviewe
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