Abstract

Abstract. Marmosets represent an attractive and widely used animal species in biomedical research, and the routine monitoring of female reproductive cycles is often mandatory in the fields of reproductive biology and stem cell research. Today, the established method for the reliable detection of ovulation is the determination of progesterone concentrations from blood samples. This method is based on relatively frequent handling and blood collections; therefore, less invasive alternatives would help to reduce stress on the animals. Here, we investigated whether the core body temperature of marmosets would show a correlation with cycle-dependent hormonal fluctuations, as has been described for humans and other primate species. In particular, the objective was to investigate whether the telemetric recording of core body temperature could replace progesterone measurements as a reliable, less invasive method for the detection of ovulation in these animals. Here we show that the core body temperature parameters in female marmosets were characterized by frequent variations, but they were not related to particular days or phases during the reproductive cycle. Therefore, the recording of core body temperature in our controlled standard experimental setting is not an appropriate method to monitor the reproductive cycle in female marmosets, and cannot replace serum progesterone measurement as a state-of-the-art method.

Highlights

  • Common marmoset monkeys (Callithrix jacchus) are small, diurnal nonhuman primates from South America; their body size of around 25 cm in length and a weight of 300–450 g enable easy handling procedures

  • Based on progesterone concentrations four out of the six animals investigated in this study were found to have regular reproduction cycles with a length of 27.4 ± 1.6 days consisting of a follicular phase of 7–10 days followed by a luteal phase ranging from 14 to 19 days

  • We investigated in adult pair-housed female marmosets possible relationships between fluctuations in hormone concentrations and the core body temperature registered via radiotelemetry transmitters implanted in the abdominal cavity

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Summary

Introduction

Common marmoset monkeys (Callithrix jacchus) are small, diurnal nonhuman primates from South America; their body size of around 25 cm in length and a weight of 300–450 g enable easy handling procedures. In common with most New World primates, marmosets do not menstruate or show other overt indications of the female cycle phase (Harding et al, 1982; Hearn, 1983; Mansfield, 2003). The established method for reliable detection of the ovulation day is the determination of progesterone concentration from blood samples (Hanazawa et al, 2012; Harding et al, 1982). Minimally invasive, this method is based on relatively frequent handling and blood collection, usually two times per week.

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