522 research outputs found

    Animal cloning and its contribution to veterinary research

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    Cloning is a technique currently used mainly for research purposes , to understand how the nucleus of a differentiated cell can, once it has been placed into the cytoplasm of an enucleated ovule, can re-acquiresthe properties of an embryonic nucleus.The rate of full term development in cloned embryos is still low, only about 5 per cent of the reconstructed embryos.However, it is now well established that clones can develop into adults with a seemingly normal physiology, as fertile animals with the same life span as animals born from sexual reproduction. In cattle, widely used as a cloning model, recent data has shown that clones’ zootechnic performances are similar, and in some instances less variable than those of animals born from a fertilised egg.In this species, cloning failures are due to early (first trimester of gestation) as well as late (last trimester of gestation) embryo and foetal mortality. Approximately 30% of clones are born with a complex lethal syndrome, known as the Large Offspring Syndrome (LOS), with a bodyweight greater than normal, placentomes in lower numbers and oedematous, and physiological disorders resulting in cardiovascular, respiratory, immune, or hepato-renal dysfunctions. Animals with this syndrome generally die within two months from birth.Current research focuses on the clinical follow-up of the gestation of clones and on embryological studies, which showed that such disorders often stem from a growth deregulation in the foetal tissues and organs.Molecular analysis of these epigenetic disorders should help understand better the ontogenesis of the body’s main functions.The study of clones shows that the programme which leads to the development of a complex living being is both robust and flexible, and that its reinitialising when introducing the somatic nucleus within the ovule cytoplasm is probably not required.Le clonage est une technique utilisée aujourd'hui essentiellement en recherche pour comprendre comment un noyau de cellules différenciées peut, une fois placé dans l'environnement cytoplasmique d'un ovule énucléé, acquérir à nouveau des propriétés de noyau embryonnaire. Le taux de développement à terme des embryons clonés est aujourd'hui toujours faible, inférieur à cinq pour cent. Il est toutefois maintenant bien établi que les clones peuvent se développer en adultes d'apparence physiologique normale, être fertiles et avoir la même durée de vie que des animaux obtenus par reproduction sexuée. Chez le bovin, largement utilisé comme modèle, des données récentes montrent que les performances zootechniques des clones sont semblables et pour certains caractères, moins variables que celles d'animaux issus de fécondation. Chez cette espèce, les échecs du clonage sont dus à des mortalités embryonnaires et foetales précoces (premier tiers de la gestation) mais aussi tardives (pendant le dernier tiers de la gestation). Environ 30 % des clones présentent à la naissance un syndrome létal complexe, le syndrome LOS, caractérisé notamment par un poids supérieur à la normale, des placentomes oedémateux en nombre réduit et des perturbations physiologiques se traduisant par des dysfonctionnements systémiques affectant soit les système cardiovasculaire, respiratoire ou immunitaire ou encore le fonctionnement hépato-rénal. Les animaux affectés par ce syndrome meurent en général dans les deux mois qui suivent la naissance. Les recherches en cours donnent une large place au suivi clinique des gestations de clones et aux études embryologiques. Elles montrent que ces perturbations ont souvent pour origine des dérégulations de la croissance des tissus et organes foetaux. L'analyse moléculaire de ces perturbations épigénétiques devrait permettre de mieux connaître l'ontogenèse des grandes fonctions de l'organisme. L'étude des clones montre que le programme de développement qui permet la construction d'un organisme vivant complexe est à la fois robuste et flexible et que sa réinitialisation au moment où l'on introduit le noyau somatique dans le cytoplasme de l'ovule n'est sans doute pas requise

    Etude de la vascularisation utéro-placentaire par angiographie Doppler énergie tridimensionnelle (évaluations fondamentales de la technique sur modèles expérimentaux de brebis et lapines gestantes, et évaluations cliniques préliminaires chez la femme enceinte.)

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    Retard de croissance intra-utérin (RCIU) et prééclampsie (PE) sont des complications majeures de la grossesse humaine et sont le plus souvent due à une insuffisance de vascularisation utéro-placentaire. Notre objectif était d'évaluer l angiographie Doppler énergie tridimensionnelle (PDA) comme nouvel outil de dépistage de la PE et du RCIU et d étude de la fonction placentaire et du RCIU sur modèles animaux. La corrélation entre les indices Doppler 3D et l'écoulement de sang réel au sein de l'unité utéro-placentaires a d'abord été évaluée sur modèle de brebis gravide, ainsi que l'impact des réglages de la machine. Un degré de corrélation plus élevé a été observé pour VI et VFI (r = 0,86 et 0,82 respectivement, p <0,0001) que pour FI (r = 0,64, p <0,0001).L'intérêt de la technique a été ensuite démontré dans un modèle de RCIU chez le lapin (femelles traitées par du L-NAME).Troisièmement, la valeur prédictive du PDA comme test de dépistage du RCIU et de la PE a été démontrée par la réalisation d'une étude prospective multicentrique chez 70 femmes enceintes à bas risque (AUC 0,95, 100% VAN avec une spécificité de 85% pour un seuil de 36.784 FI placentaire).Intra-uterine growth retardation (IUGR) and preeclampsia (PE) are major complications of human pregnancy & are most often due to an insufficient utero-placental vascularization. Our aim was to evaluate the three-dimensional power Doppler angiography (PDA) as a new tool for the screening IUGR & PE & for the study placental function and IUGR in animal models. The correlation between 3D Doppler indices and the real blood flow within the utero-placental unit was first evaluated in the pregnant sheep model, as well as the impact of machine settings. A higher correlation degree was observed for VI and VFI (r = 0.86 and 0.82 respectively p<0.0001) than for FI (r = 0.64; p<0.0001).The interest of the technique was secondly demonstrated in a rabbit IUGR model (females treated with L-NAME).Thirdly, the predictive value of PDA as a screening test for IUGR & PE was demonstrated by conducting a prospective multicentric study in 70 low risk pregnant women (AUC 0.95, 100% NPV with a specificity of 85% for a 36.784 placental FI threshold).PARIS11-SCD-Bib. électronique (914719901) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Discriminative imaging of maternal and fetal blood flow within the placenta using ultrafast ultrasound

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    Remerciements à INRA UCEA et CR2iInternational audienceBeing able to map accurately placental blood flow in clinics could have major implications in the diagnosis and follow-up of pregnancy complications such as intrauterine growth restriction (IUGR). Moreover, the impact of such an imaging modality for a better diagnosis of placental dysfunction would require to solve the unsolved problem of discriminating the strongly intricated maternal and fetal vascular networks. However, no current imaging modality allows both to achieve sufficient sensitivity and selectivity to tell these entangled flows apart. Although ultrasound imaging would be the clinical modality of choice for such a problem, conventional Doppler echography both lacks of sensibility to detect and map the placenta microvascularization and a concept to discriminate both entangled flows. In this work, we propose to use an ultrafast Doppler imaging approach both to map with an enhanced sensitivity the small vessels of the placenta (~100 μm) and to assess the variation of the Doppler frequency simultaneously in all pixels of the image within a cardiac cycle. This approach is evaluated in vivo in the placenta of pregnant rabbits: By studying the local flow pulsatility pixel per pixel, it becomes possible to separate maternal and fetal blood in 2D from their pulsatile behavior. Significance Statement: The in vivo ability to image and discriminate maternal and fetal blood flow within the placenta is an unsolved problem which could improve the diagnosis of pregnancy complications such as intrauterine growth restriction or preeclampsia. To date, no imaging modality has both sufficient sensitivity and selectivity to discriminate these intimately entangled flows. We demonstrate that Ultrafast Doppler ultrasound method with a frame rate 100x faster than conventional imaging solves this issue. It permits the mapping of small vessels of the placenta (~100 μm) in 2D with an enhanced sensitivity. By assessing pixel-per-pixel pulsatility within single cardiac cycles, it achieves maternal and fetal blood flow discrimination

    Animal models of intrauterine growth retardation of vascular origin

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    Placental insufficiencies can complicate up to 7% of all pregnancies. They can lead to intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR) and preeclampsia, and represent a major public health concern. The pathophysiology of these placental anomalies is not yet fully understood. For obvious ethical reasons, studies in pregnant women are limited to non-invasive techniques, such as ultrasound scans and maternal blood tests. Therefore, animal models of IUGR play an important role in the study of this condition. Because the models using maternal undernutrition to induce foetal IUGR are not as appropriate to mimic the vascular IUGR observed in developed countries, we describe the animal models of vascular IUGR used currently: models based on an application of stress to the mother, genetic models, and surgical models. Finally, we describe briefly the controlled hypoperfusion model in non-anaesthetized ewes, currently developed in our laboratory.Les défauts de perfusion placentaire compliquent environ 7 % des grossesses. Ils peuvent entraîner un retard de croissance intra-utérin (RCIU) et une pré-éclampsie, et posent un problème majeur de santé publique. La physiopathologie de ces défauts n'est pas totalement connue. Les études chez la femme sont limitées à des examens non invasifs, échographiques et biologiques, pour des raisons éthiques évidentes. Il est donc important de disposer de modèles animaux expérimentaux pour appréhender cette pathologie. Nous n'abordons pas ici les modèles de sous-nutrition maternelle, qui ne nous semblent pas complètement appropriés pour reproduire les aspects physiopathologiques observés dans les pays développés. Les modèles animaux de RCIU d'origine vasculaire jusqu'ici utilisés sont décrits: modèles basés sur l'application d'un stress à la mère, modèles génétiques et modèles chirurgicaux. Enfin. Nous décrivons aussi brièvement le modèle d'hypoperfusion contrôlée chez la brebis vigile, actuellement mis au point au laboratoire

    Impact of exposure to diesel exhaust during pregnancy on mammary gland development and milk composition in the rabbit

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    Exposure to fine-particulate air pollution is a major global health concern because it is associated with reduced birth weight and an increased risk of cardiovascular disease. Here we have investigated the potential for exposure to diesel exhaust during pregnancy to influence mammary gland development and milk composition. Female rabbits were therefore exposed by nose-only inhalation to either diluted diesel exhaust fumes (1 mg/m3) or clean air for 2h/day, 5 days/week, from the 3rd to the 27th days of pregnancy. On Day 28 of pregnancy, mammary glands were collected from twelve females (six controls and six diesel-exposed) and assessed for morphological and functional alterations. Milk samples were collected from eighteen dams (nine controls and nine diesel-exposed) during early (days 2 to 4) and established (days 13 to 16) lactation to verify the composition of fatty acids and major proteins and leptin levels. The mammary alveolar lumina contained numerous fat globules, and stearoyl CoA reductase expression was higher in mammary epithelia from diesel exhaust-exposed rabbits, which together suggested increased mammary lipid biosynthesis. Gas chromatography analysis of the composition of milk fatty acids revealed a sharp rise in the total fatty acid content, mainly due to monounsaturated fatty acids. Liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry analysis of milk samples enabled identification and quantification of the main rabbit milk proteins and their main phosphorylated isoforms, and revealed important changes to individual casein and whey protein contents and to their most phosphorylated isoforms during early lactation. Taken together, these findings suggest that repeated daily exposure to diesel exhaust fumes during pregnancy at urban pollution levels can influence lipid metabolism in the mammary gland and the lipid and protein composition of milk. As milk may contribute to metabolic programming, such alterations affecting milk composition should be taken into account from a public health perspective

    Morphometric analysis of the placenta in the New World mouse Necromys lasiurus (Rodentia, Cricetidae): a comparison of placental development in cricetids and murids

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    Background: Stereology is an established method to extrapolate three-dimensional quantities from two-dimensional images. It was applied to placentation in the mouse, but not yet for other rodents. Herein, we provide the first study on quantitative placental development in a sigmodontine rodent species with relatively similar gestational time. Placental structure was also compared to the mouse, in order to evaluate similarities and differences in developmental patterns at the end of gestation. Methods: Fetal and placental tissues of Necromys lasiurus were collected and weighed at 3 different stages of gestation (early, mid and late gestation) for placental stereology. The total and relative volumes of placenta and of its main layers were investigated. Volume fractions of labyrinth components were quantified by the One Stop method in 31 placentae collected from different individuals, using the Mercator® software. Data generated at the end of gestation from N. lasiurus placentae were compared to those of Mus musculus domesticus obtained at the same stage. Results: A significant increase in the total absolute volumes of the placenta and its main layers occurred from early to mid-gestation, followed by a reduction near term, with the labyrinth layer becoming the most prominent area. Moreover, at the end of gestation, the total volume of the mouse placenta was significantly increased compared to that of N. lasiurus although the proportions of the labyrinth layer and junctional zones were similar. Analysis of the volume fractions of the components in the labyrinth indicated a significant increase in fetal vessels and sinusoidal giant cells, a decrease in labyrinthine trophoblast whereas the proportion of maternal blood space remained stable in the course of gestation. On the other hand, in the mouse, volume fractions of fetal vessels and sinusoidal giant cells decreased whereas the volume fraction of labyrinthine trophoblast increased compared to N. lasiurus placenta. Conclusions: Placental development differed between N. lasiurus and M. musculus domesticus. In particular, the low placental efficiency in N. lasiurus seemed to induce morphological optimization of fetomaternal exchanges. In conclusion, despite similar structural aspects of placentation in these species, the quantitative dynamics showed important differences.For technical support we thank Marie-Christine Aubrière, Michèle Dahirel of the Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, Jouy-en-Josas, as well as members of the Universidade Federal Rural do Semi-Árido, Mossoró. We thank also Yves Maurin for Nanozoomer facilities. This research was supported by INRA and by grants from FAPESP (Process number: 09/53392-8).INRAFAPESP [09/53392-8

    Environmental risk factors in puppies and kittens for developing chronic disorders in adulthood: A call for research on developmental programming

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    Many dogs and cats are affected by chronic diseases that significantly impact their health and welfare and relationships with humans. Some of these diseases can be challenging to treat, and a better understanding of early-life risk factors for diseases occurring in adulthood is key to improving preventive veterinary care and husbandry practices. This article reviews early-life risk factors for obesity and chronic enteropathy, and for chronic behavioral problems, which can also be intractable with life-changing consequences. Aspects of early life in puppies and kittens that can impact the risk of adult disorders include maternal nutrition, establishment of the gut microbiome, maternal behavior, weaning, nutrition during growth, growth rate, socialization with conspecifics and humans, rehoming and neutering. Despite evidence in some species that the disorders reviewed here reflect the developmental origins of health and disease (DOHaD), developmental programming has rarely been studied in dogs and cats. Priorities and strategies to increase knowledge of early-life risk factors and DOHaD in dogs and cats are discussed. Critical windows of development are proposed: preconception, gestation, the suckling period, early growth pre-neutering or pre-puberty, and growth post-neutering or post-puberty to adult size, the durations of which depend upon species and breed. Challenges to DOHaD research in these species include a large number of breeds with wide genetic and phenotypic variability, and the existence of many mixed-breed individuals. Moreover, difficulties in conducting prospective lifelong cohort studies are exacerbated by discontinuity in pet husbandry between breeders and subsequent owners, and by the dispersed nature of pet ownership

    Placental-fetal distribution of carbon particles in a pregnant rabbit model after repeated exposure to diluted diesel engine exhaust

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    BACKGROUND: Airborne pollution particles have been shown to translocate from the mother's lung to the fetal circulation, but their distribution and internal placental-fetal tissue load remain poorly explored. Here, we investigated the placental-fetal load and distribution of diesel engine exhaust particles during gestation under controlled exposure conditions using a pregnant rabbit model. Pregnant dams were exposed by nose-only inhalation to either clean air (controls) or diluted and filtered diesel engine exhaust (1 mg/m 3) for 2 h/day, 5 days/week, from gestational day (GD) 3 to GD27. At GD28, placental and fetal tissues (i.e., heart, kidney, liver, lung and gonads) were collected for biometry and to study the presence of carbon particles (CPs) using white light generation by carbonaceous particles under femtosecond pulsed laser illumination. RESULTS: CPs were detected in the placenta, fetal heart, kidney, liver, lung and gonads in significantly higher amounts in exposed rabbits compared with controls. Through multiple factor analysis, we were able to discriminate the diesel engine exposed pregnant rabbits from the control group taking all variables related to fetoplacental biometry and CP load into consideration. Our findings did not reveal a sex effect, yet a potential interaction effect might be present between exposure and fetal sex. CONCLUSIONS: The results confirmed the translocation of maternally inhaled CPs from diesel engine exhaust to the placenta which could be detected in fetal organs during late-stage pregnancy. The exposed can be clearly discriminated from the control group with respect to fetoplacental biometry and CP load. The differential particle load in the fetal organs may contribute to the effects on fetoplacental biometry and to the malprogramming of the fetal phenotype with long-term effects later in life

    A perspective on the developmental toxicity of inhaled nanoparticles.

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    This paper aimed to clarify whether maternal inhalation of engineered nanoparticles (NP) may constitute a hazard to pregnancy and fetal development, primarily based on experimental animal studies of NP and air pollution particles. Overall, it is plausible that NP may translocate from the respiratory tract to the placenta and fetus, but also that adverse effects may occur secondarily to maternal inflammatory responses. The limited database describes several organ systems in the offspring to be potentially sensitive to maternal inhalation of particles, but large uncertainties exist about the implications for embryo–fetal development and health later in life. Clearly, the potential for hazard remains to be characterized. Considering the increased production and application of nanomaterials and related consumer products a testing strategy for NP should be established. Due to large gaps in data, significant amounts of groundwork are warranted for a testing strategy to be established on a sound scientific basis
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