4.4 Article

Developmental competence of heat stressed oocytes from Holstein and Limousine cows matured in vitro

Journal

REPRODUCTION IN DOMESTIC ANIMALS
Volume 56, Issue 10, Pages 1302-1314

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/rda.13993

Keywords

cattle; gene expression; heat stress; in vitro embryo production

Funding

  1. European Union (European Social Fund-ESF) [MIS-5000432]

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The negative effects of heat stress on fertility are well-studied in dairy cattle, but less is known about beef cattle. This study found that heat stress reduced blastocyst yield in both Limousine and Holstein cows, with a greater suppression in Limousines. Gene expression changes were observed in both breeds, with Holsteins showing alterations in cumulus cells and blastocysts, while Limousines exhibited differences in oocytes, cumulus cells, and blastocysts. Holstein COCs were found to be more tolerant to heat stress, potentially due to selective breeding practices.
The negative effects of heat stress on dairy cattle's fertility have been extensively studied, but the relevant knowledge for beef cattle is rather limited. The aims of this study were to investigate the effects of HS during in vitro maturation on the developmental potential of oocytes derived from Limousine and Holstein cows and to estimate the effect of the differential gene expression of important genes in oocytes, cumulus cells and blastocysts in the growth competence between the breeds. In seven replicates, cumulus oocyte complexes from Holstein and Limousine cows were matured for 24 hr at 39 degrees C (controls C; Hol_39, Lim_39) or at 41 degrees C from hour 2 to hour 8 of IVM (treated T; Hol_41, Lim_41), fertilized, and presumptive zygotes were cultured for 9 days at 39 degrees C. Cleavage and embryo formation rates were evaluated 48 hr post-insemination and on days 7, 8 and 9, respectively. From all groups, subsets of cumulus cells, oocytes and blastocysts were analysed for the relative expression of genes related to metabolism, stress, apoptosis and placentation. No difference was detected in cleavage rate or in blastocyst formation rate among the control groups. In both breeds, heat stress reduced blastocyst yield, but at all days the suppression was higher in Limousines. In Holsteins, altered gene expression was detected in cumulus cells (G6PD, GLUT1) and blastocysts (PLAC8), while in Limousines, differences were found in oocytes (G6PD, HSP90AA1), in cumulus cells (CPT1B, HSP90AA1, SOD2) and blastocysts (DNMT, HSP90AA1, SOD2). It appears that Holstein COCs are more tolerant than Limousine COCs, possibly due to compulsory, production driven selection.

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