Abstract

The acquisition of dominance and ovulatory capacity was evaluated in follicles from cows that were carriers or half-sibling noncarriers of the Trio allele. Follicle size at acquisition of follicular dominance was determined by evaluating whether follicles ovulate after GnRH challenge (ovulatory capacity-experiment 1) and by determination of intrafollicular concentrations of estradiol and free insulin like growth factor 1 (IGF1) and relative mRNA expression of cytochrome P450 family 19 subfamily A member 1 (CYP19A1), luteinizing hormone/choriogonadotropin receptor (LHCGR), and pappalysin 1 (PAPPA, previously known as pregnancy-associated plasma protein A, pappalysin 1) in granulosa cells from follicles of different sizes (experiment 2). Ovulatory capacity developed in follicles at 8.3 mm (50% ovulatory capacity) in noncarriers but at smaller sizes (5.5 mm) in Trio carriers. Similarly, in experiment 2, follicles of Trio carriers acquired a dominant phenotype, as determined by intrafollicular estradiol and CYP19A1, LHCGR, and PAPPA mRNA expression in granulosa cells, at significantly smaller sizes but at a similar time after wave emergence. Overall, dominance/ovulatory capacity was acquired when follicles of Trio carriers were ∼30% the size (volume basis) of follicles in noncarriers. In addition, follicles in Trio carriers appear to acquire dominance in a hierarchal manner, as demonstrated by the progressively greater number of follicles with a dominant phenotype between days 2 and 4 after wave emergence. Thus, results from this study provide further support for a physiological model in which selection of multiple follicles in Trio allele carriers is characterized by acquisition of dominance at a smaller follicle size but at a similar time in the follicular wave with multiple follicles acquiring dominance in a hierarchal sequence.

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