Abstract

Reproductive efficiency and female fertility is essential for productive and sustainable beef cattle operations. Gram-negative bacterial infections cause release of the endotoxin lipopolysaccharide (LPS) which initiates immune responses shown to alter ovarian steroidogenesis and impair oocyte development. The current study was designed to investigate the impact of varying levels of naturally occurring infection and follicular LPS on estradiol (E2) production and oocyte maturation. Bovine ovary pairs were harvested from a slaughterhouse, and oocytes were aspirated from small follicles and matured in vitro. Meiotic events were evaluated on nuclear maturation and spindle morphology to classify oocytes as normal or abnormal. Follicular fluid LPS concentrations were measured and subsequently separated into Low or High LPS groups. A marked difference was detected between the percent of abnormal oocytes matured from Low LPS follicles, compared to the percent of abnormal oocytes matured from High LPS follicles (P = 0.1). Follicular E2 concentrations tended to be greater for high LPS follicles (P = 0.1), however, relative abundance of mRNA transcripts for aromatase (P = 0.93) and beta-catenin (P = 0.63) were similar between groups. No changes were detected in Toll-like Receptor 4 (P = 0.15), Myeloid Differentiation Factor-2 (P = 0.61), or cluster of differentiation 14 (P = 0.46) mRNA transcript abundance in follicles with high LPS, compared to low. Therefore, even Low levels of follicular LPS indicating a subacute infection is capable of impacting the ovarian milieu and may represent an unappreciated factor leading to reduced female fertility and decreased cow retention.

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