• Title/Summary/Keyword: maternal effect

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The Effect of Sub-division (Two or Three Sub-populations) of a Population on Genetic Gain and Genetic Diversity

  • Oikawa, T.;Matsui, H.;Sato, K.
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.15 no.6
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    • pp.767-771
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    • 2002
  • Breeding efficiencies were compared among three population schemes: a single population, a population with two subpopulations and a population with three sub-populations. A simulation experiment of selection was carried out for 10 generations with 20 replications each by comparing average breeding values and inbreeding coefficients among the three population schemes. Phenotypes of three traits were generated with a model comprising 36 loci, each with additive genetic effects and residuals distributed normally. Among the three population schemes, the single population scheme was definitely superior to the other two with regards to selection response and inbreeding. The multiple sub-population scheme was, however, considered to be an alternative population scheme when the difference in economic weights of the traits was small among the sub-populations, assuming moderate inbreeding depression for traits and crossbreeding. The scheme with two sub-populations had a higher genetic value than that with three subpopulations; however, the genetic values of the schemes were comparable when maternal heterosis was taken into account. The choice of population schemes may depend on the cost-sharing policy between the breeding population and the commercial population rather than just the breeding efficiency.

Developmental Toxicity Study in the Embryos/Fetuses with a Recombinant Human Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor (YHB6211) in Pregnant Rabbits (임신토끼에 있어서 새로운 Recombinant Human Granulocyte Colony-Stimulating Factor(YHB6211)의 배.태자 발생독성평가)

  • 황재식;장호송;정은용;이수해;신지순;서동석;신장우;남상윤;김대중
    • Biomolecules & Therapeutics
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    • v.9 no.4
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    • pp.311-317
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    • 2001
  • YHB6211, a newly developed recombinant human granulocyte colonystimulating factor, was administered at dose levels of 0, 3, 15, and 75 $\mu$g/kg/day intravenously to the pregnant New Zealand White rabbits (20 rabbits per group) during the organogenetic period, days 6 to 18 of gestation. All dams were subjected to Caesarian section on day 28 of gestation and their fetuses were examined for external, visceral, and skeletal abnormalities. No abnormalities in clinical signs, body weight changes, gross findings, mortality, and external appearance were found in all dams and fetuses exposed to 0, 3, and 15 $\mu$g/kg/day of YHB6211. However, in the group treated with 75 $\mu\textrm{g}$/kg/day of YHB6211, maternal body and uterine weights, fetal body weights and length, and the number of live fetuses were significantly decreased and further fetal mortality was remarkably increased. It is suggested that YHB6211 may have no side effect up to the dose level of 15 $\mu$g/kg/day, and there would be no teratogenicity for fetuses of rabbits up to 75 $\mu\textrm{g}$/kg/day even if it may have some toxic effects over 75$\mu\textrm{g}$/kg/day for dams and fetuses of rabbits.

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A Structural Model for Primiparas' Breastfeeding Behavior (초산모의 모유수유행위 구조모형)

  • Yang, Hyun-Joo;Seo, Ji-Min
    • Journal of Korean Academy of Nursing
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    • v.43 no.3
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    • pp.399-408
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    • 2013
  • Purpose: The study was done to construct and test a structural model to explain primipara breastfeeding behavior. Methods: The participants were 213 primiparas on postpartum wards. Data were analyzed using the PASW 18.0 and AMOS 19.0 programs. Results: Fitness statistics for the hypothetical model were appropriate ($x^2$=38.50, p=.070, GFI=.96, RMSEA=.05, AGFI=.93, NFI=.95, TLI=.97, CFI=.98, PNFI=.57, $x^2/df$=1.43). Breastfeeding behaviors were directly influenced by intention to breastfeed, perceived effectiveness of breastfeeding, and the amount of supplementary feeding. The amount of supplementary feeding had the largest direct impact on breastfeeding behavior. The largest total effect on breastfeeding behavior was intention to breastfeed. The environment of the maternity hospital indirectly influenced breastfeeding behavior. These factors explained 18.9% of variance in the primipara breastfeeding behavior. Conclusion: The results of the study indicate that in order to promote primipara breastfeeding the amount of supplementary feeding immediately after the birth should be limited and an environment that encourages exclusive breastfeeding in the hospital should be provided. The results also suggest it is necessary to provide nursing interventions that increase the intention to breastfeed and the perceived effectiveness of breastfeeding.

Effects of Maternal Massage to Newborn on Stress, Immune Function and Self-confidence of Mothers during the Postpartum Period (신생아 마사지를 통한 모아상호작용이 어머니의 스트레스, 면역기능 및 영아기르기 자신감에 미치는 효과)

  • Kim, Sa-Duck;Park, Ho-Ran;Lee, So-Young;Moon, Young-Im;Park, Jin-Hee
    • Women's Health Nursing
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.265-272
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    • 2005
  • Purpose: To investigate the effect of infant massage on stress, immune function and self-confidence in postpartum mothers. Method: From September, 2003 to February, 2004, 65 women who had delivered babies and were enrolled in the postpartum clinic were assigned to the experimental group or control group. In the experimental group, infant massage was given for 20 minute sessions twice a day from 4 days to 14 days after delivery. The instruments were Parental Stress Index, serum cortisol levels, WBCs, lymphocytes, and Self Confidence Scale. Results: Stress scores, WBCs and lymphocytes showed significant differences by the time, but there weren't significant differences according to the group and interactions between the group and the time. Cortisol and self-confidence scores showed significant differences by the time and the group. Conclusions: Applying massage to their newborn baby influenced cortisol levels of postpartum mothers. Therefore stress, cortisol, and immune functions in postpartum mothers should be generally screened and follow up studies are needed for the effective application of massage in postpartum mothers.

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Intraovarian vascular enhancement via stromal injection of platelet-derived growth factors: Exploring subsequent oocyte chromosomal status and in vitro fertilization outcomes

  • Wood, Samuel H.;Sills, E. Scott
    • Clinical and Experimental Reproductive Medicine
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    • v.47 no.2
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    • pp.94-100
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    • 2020
  • The inverse correlation between maternal age and pregnancy rate represents a major challenge for reproductive endocrinology. The high embryo ploidy error rate in failed in vitro fertilization (IVF) cycles reflects genetic misfires accumulated by older oocytes over time. Despite the application of different follicular recruitment protocols during IVF, gonadotropin modifications are generally futile in addressing such damage. Even when additional oocytes are retrieved, quality is frequently poor. Older oocytes with serious cytoplasmic and/or chromosomal errors are often harvested from poorly perfused follicles, and ovarian vascularity and follicular oxygenation impact embryonic chromosomal competency. Because stimulation regimens exert their effects briefly and immediately before ovulation, gonadotropins alone are an ineffective antidote to long-term hypoxic pathology. In contrast, the tissue repair properties (and particularly the angiogenic effects) of platelet-rich plasma (PRP) are well known, with applications in other clinical contexts. Injection of conventional PRP and/or its components (e.g., isolated platelet-derived growth factors as a cell-free substrate) into ovarian tissue prior to IVF has been reported to improve reproductive outcomes. Any derivative neovascularity may modulate oocyte competence by increasing cellular oxygenation and/or lowering concentrations of intraovarian reactive oxygen species. We propose a mechanism to support intrastromal angiogenesis, improved follicular perfusion, and, crucially, embryo ploidy rescue. This last effect may be explained by mRNA upregulation coordinated by PRP-associated molecular signaling, as in other tissue systems. Additionally, we outline an intraovarian injection technique for platelet-derived growth factors and present this method to help minimize reliance on donor oocytes and conventional hormone replacement therapy.

Recent insight and future techniques to enhance rumen fermentation in dairy goats

  • Mamuad, Lovelia L.;Lee, Sung Sill;Lee, Sang Suk
    • Asian-Australasian Journal of Animal Sciences
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    • v.32 no.8_spc
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    • pp.1321-1330
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    • 2019
  • Recent development of novel techniques in systems biology have been used to improve and manipulate the rumen microbial ecosystem and gain a deeper understanding of its physiological and microbiological interactions and relationships. This provided a deeper insight and understanding of the relationship and interactions between the rumen microbiome and the host animal. New high-throughput techniques have revealed that the dominance of Proteobacteria in the neonatal gut might be derived from the maternal placenta through fetal swallowing of amniotic fluid in utero, which gradually decreases in the reticulum, omasum, and abomasum with increasing age after birth. Multi "omics" technologies have also enhanced rumen fermentation and production efficiency of dairy goats using dietary interventions through greater knowledge of the links between nutrition, metabolism, and the rumen microbiome and their effect in the environment. For example, supplementation of dietary lipid, such as linseed, affects rumen fermentation by favoring the accumulation of ${\alpha}$-linolenic acid biohydrogenation with a high correlation to the relative abundance of Fibrobacteriaceae. This provides greater resolution of the interlinkages among nutritional strategies, rumen microbes, and metabolism of the host animal that can set the foundation for new advancements in ruminant nutrition using multi 'omics' technologies.

Nanotechnology in reproductive medicine: Opportunities for clinical translation

  • Shandilya, Ruchita;Pathak, Neelam;Lohiya, Nirmal Kumar;Sharma, Radhey Shyam;Mishra, Pradyumna Kumar
    • Clinical and Experimental Reproductive Medicine
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    • v.47 no.4
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    • pp.245-262
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    • 2020
  • In recent years, nanotechnology has revolutionized global healthcare and has been predicted to exert a remarkable effect on clinical medicine. In this context, the clinical use of nanomaterials for cancer diagnosis, fertility preservation, and the management of infertility and other pathologies linked to pubertal development, menopause, sexually transmitted infections, and HIV (human immunodeficiency virus) has substantial promise to fill the existing lacunae in reproductive healthcare. Of late, a number of clinical trials involving the use of nanoparticles for the early detection of reproductive tract infections and cancers, targeted drug delivery, and cellular therapeutics have been conducted. However, most of these trials of nanoengineering are still at a nascent stage, and better synergy between pharmaceutics, chemistry, and cutting-edge molecular sciences is needed for effective translation of these interventions from bench to bedside. To bridge the gap between translational outcome and product development, strategic partnerships with the insight and ability to anticipate challenges, as well as an indepth understanding of the molecular pathways involved, are highly essential. Such amalgamations would overcome the regulatory gauntlet and technical hurdles, thereby facilitating the effective clinical translation of these nano-based tools and technologies. The present review comprehensively focuses on emerging applications of nanotechnology, which holds enormous promise for improved therapeutics and early diagnosis of various human reproductive tract diseases and conditions.

Supplementing maternal sows' diet with 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 increased milk profile and the health status of their young ones

  • Vetriselvi Sampath;In Ho Kim
    • Korean Journal of Agricultural Science
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    • v.51 no.3
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    • pp.391-398
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    • 2024
  • A total of 10 sows (average body weight of 185.5 kg, Landrace × Yorkshire) and their progenies were utilized in this experiment. At first, sows were randomly allotted to 1 of 2 dietary treatments with 5 replicates of 1 sow and its litter per pen following a randomized complete block design. The test treatments were: Control (CON) basal diet and a basal diet supplemented with 0.036% of 25-hydroxyvitamin D3 (25(OH)D3). Sows fed diet supplemented with 25(OH)D3 had no adverse effect on their reproduction performance such as body weight, average daily feed intake, body weight loss, and body weight loss difference during before farrowing, after farrowing, and at weaning. Piglets born from sows fed dietary 25(OH)D3 showed significantly increased (p < 0.05) weaning weight and average daily gain. Sows fed diet supplemented with 25(OH)D3 had high total solid (TS) colostrum concentration at week 1, however at the end of week 3 the TS level had decreased approximately 2%. We believe that the positive findings of the present study could establish a major constituent for the swine mammary secretions and provide a reliable groundwork for future experiments in animal husbandry.

Effect of ZNimesulide on the Differentiation and Survival of Endothelial Progenitor Cells

  • Oh, Ho-Kyun;Kim, Sun-Yong;Baek, Sang-Hong;Lim, Sung-Cil;Ahn, Hyun-Young;Shin, Jong-Chul;Hong, Sung-Hee;Hong, Yong-Kil;Joe, Young-Ae
    • Biomolecules & Therapeutics
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    • v.12 no.4
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    • pp.221-227
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    • 2004
  • Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), particularly the highly selective cyclooxygenase (COX)-2 inhibitors have been shown to decrease the growth of tumor, in part, by inhibition of neovascularization. Recently, besides mature endothelial cells, endothelial progenitor cells (EPCs) have been shown to contribute neovascularization in angiogenic tissues. In this study, we addressed a question whether nimesulide, a selective COX-2 inhibitor, could affect differentiation of EPCs into adhesive endothelial cells in vitro. Total mononuclear cells were isolated from cord blood by Ficoll density gradient centrifugation, and then the cells were incubated with nimesulide or vehicle control for 7 days. The number of adherent and spindle-shaped cells decreased by nimesulide treatment in a concentration-dependent fashion at a concentration range of 5 - 200 ${\mu}M$. Moreover, the adherent cells double positive for DiI-ac-LDL uptake and lectin binding significantly decreased upon nimesulide treatment. There was no change of expression of CD31 between treatment and control groups, whereas slight reduction was detected upon treatment in expression of VE-cadherin, ICAM-1, vWF, ${\alpha}v$, and ${\alpha}5$. Nimesulide also reduced cell viability during first 3 days' culture and induced apoptosis in adherent EPCs, resulting in increased annexin-V-positive and propidium iodide-negative cells. Taken together, these results suggest that nimesulide could be applied for the inhibition of new vessel formation, in part, by inhibiting differentiation and survival of EPCs.

Allozyme Variation of Pinus rigida Mill. in an F1-Hybrid Seed Orchard and Estimation of the Proportion of F1-Hybrid Seeds by Allozyme Analysis (잡종(雜種) 채종원(採種園)에서 리기다소나무의 Allozyme 변이(變異)와 Allozyme 분석(分析)에 의(依)한 잡종종자(雜種種字) 발생률(發生率)의 추정(推定))

  • Chung, Min Sup
    • Journal of Korean Society of Forest Science
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    • v.66 no.1
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    • pp.109-117
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    • 1984
  • Allozyme study for open pollinated seeds of forty nine pitch pine families in an $F_1$-hybrid seed orchard demonstrated that allozyme variants in aspartate aminotransferase(AAT), glutamate dehydrogenase(GDH) and leucine aminopeptidase(LAP) systems are encoded by at Least eight loci; five for AAT, one for GDH and two fur LAP. Allozyme variations showed polymorphisms at seven of the eight loci, except GDH. Average number of alleles examined over six loci were 2.33 and 2.67 for maternal and progeny groups, respectively. Average heterozygosity and genetic diversity computed over six loci were, respectively, 0.235 and 5.409 for maternal tree group, 0.238 and 5.569 for progeny group. The proportion of $F_1$-hybrid seeds estimated by allozyme analysis was 0.77%. The estimated proportion of $F_1$ hybrid seeds by allozyme study is in good agreement with the value 0.73% estimated by morphological study for the proportion of pitch ${\times}$ Loblolly $F_1$ hybrid seedlings at a nursery. Indications for Wahlund effect, high levels of self-fertilization and for non-random matings in the $F_1$ hybrid seed orchard call for cautions in estimating allele frequency changes and mating probabilities for the parental and progeny groups.

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