Abstract

The influence of nutritional protein during the first and second trimesters of pregnancy on placental measures at term and caruncle numbers in the uteri of adult offspring was determined in composite beef heifers. At artificial insemination (AI), heifers were divided by weight and composite genotype into four dietary treatment groups, identified by the level of protein components fed during the first and second trimesters: high/high (HH), high/low (HL), low/high (LH), low/low (LL). Expelled placentas were collected and weighed, and cotyledons were dissected, counted, weighed, and measured. Uteri from mature female offspring were dissected at slaughter and caruncles counted. The number of cotyledons in the expelled placenta was increased by high dietary protein in the second trimester (P = 0.02) and varied with genotype (P = 0.03). Placental weight was influenced by maternal undernutrition during early gestation dependent on dam genotype (P = 0.001). Placental efficiency, as determined by calf weight:placental weight, increased with dam age (P = 0.03). Calf birth weight was closely associated with placental weight (P = 0.002) and cotyledonary weight (P = 0.001) and surface area (P = 0.04), but not with the number of cotyledons. Leptin concentrations during early (R = –0.29) and late gestation (R = –0.25) correlated with placental weight, and Insulin-like growth factor binding proteins throughout gestation correlated with the number of cotyledons (R = –0.28 to–0.33). The number of uterine caruncles in the nonpregnant adult offspring did not correlate with the dam's genotype, nutrition treatment, or cotyledon number in the expelled placenta.

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