Influenced by animal welfare requirements and expensive labor cost, producers tend to feed layers in non-cage system such as floor rearing. With the development of commercial lines of dwarf layers, the property of dwa...Influenced by animal welfare requirements and expensive labor cost, producers tend to feed layers in non-cage system such as floor rearing. With the development of commercial lines of dwarf layers, the property of dwarf layers' natural mating is drawing more and more attention. In this study, the authors hybridized Nongda Ill dwarf layers with White Leghorn chickens in floor-rearing system to research whether dwarf layers had defect in natural mating. Two steps of experiments were performed. The authors detected the fertilization rate of collected eggs, observed chickens' behavior in step I when a hen from other group was suddenly put into and recorded copulation number of every group in step II from 7:30 to 19:30. The results indicated that drawf cocks were as good as Leghorn cocks in natrual mating under floor-rearing system while drawf hens were better than Leghorn hens. Observation results showed no difference on reaction to intermixed hens between drawf layers and Leghorn layers. The best proportion of male to female for drawf layers was 1:8 in this experiment and dwarf cocks tended to mate dwarf hens rather than Leghorn hens.展开更多
Since the first demonstration of sperm entry into the fertilized eggs of Mediterranean sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus by Hertwig(1876),enormous progress and insights have been made on this topic.However,the precise ...Since the first demonstration of sperm entry into the fertilized eggs of Mediterranean sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus by Hertwig(1876),enormous progress and insights have been made on this topic.However,the precise molecular mechanisms underlying fertilization are largely unknown.The two most dramatic changes taking place in the zygote immediately after fertilization are:(i) a sharp increase of intracellular Ca2+ that initiates at the sperm interaction site and traverses the egg cytoplasm as a wave,and(ii) the concomitant dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton.Traditionally,this has been studied most extensively in the sea urchin eggs,but another echinoderm,starfish,whose eggs are much bigger and transparent,has facilitated experimental approaches using microinjection and fluorescent imaging methodologies.Thus in starfish,it has been shown that the sperm-induced Ca2+ increase in the fertilized egg can be recapitulated by several Ca2+ -evoking second messengers,namely inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate(InsP3) ,cyclic ADP-ribose(cADPr) and nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate(NAADP) ,which may play distinct roles in the generation and propagation of the Ca2+ waves.Interestingly,it has also been found that the dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton in the fertilized eggs plays pivotal roles in guiding monospermic sperm entry and in the fine modulation of the intracellular Ca2+ signaling.As it is well known that Ca2+ regulates the structure of the actin cytoskeleton,our finding that Ca2+ signaling can be reciprocally affected by the state of the actin cytoskeleton raises an intriguing possibility that actin and Ca2+ signaling may form a'positive feedback loop'that accelerates the downstream events of fertilization.Perturbation of the cortical actin networks also inhibits cortical granules exocytosis.Polymerizing actin bundles also compose the'acrosome process,'a tubular structure protruding from the head of fertilizing sperm. Hence,actin,which is one of the most strictly conserved proteins in eukaryotes,modulates almost all major aspects of fertilization.展开更多
文摘Influenced by animal welfare requirements and expensive labor cost, producers tend to feed layers in non-cage system such as floor rearing. With the development of commercial lines of dwarf layers, the property of dwarf layers' natural mating is drawing more and more attention. In this study, the authors hybridized Nongda Ill dwarf layers with White Leghorn chickens in floor-rearing system to research whether dwarf layers had defect in natural mating. Two steps of experiments were performed. The authors detected the fertilization rate of collected eggs, observed chickens' behavior in step I when a hen from other group was suddenly put into and recorded copulation number of every group in step II from 7:30 to 19:30. The results indicated that drawf cocks were as good as Leghorn cocks in natrual mating under floor-rearing system while drawf hens were better than Leghorn hens. Observation results showed no difference on reaction to intermixed hens between drawf layers and Leghorn layers. The best proportion of male to female for drawf layers was 1:8 in this experiment and dwarf cocks tended to mate dwarf hens rather than Leghorn hens.
文摘Since the first demonstration of sperm entry into the fertilized eggs of Mediterranean sea urchin Paracentrotus lividus by Hertwig(1876),enormous progress and insights have been made on this topic.However,the precise molecular mechanisms underlying fertilization are largely unknown.The two most dramatic changes taking place in the zygote immediately after fertilization are:(i) a sharp increase of intracellular Ca2+ that initiates at the sperm interaction site and traverses the egg cytoplasm as a wave,and(ii) the concomitant dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton.Traditionally,this has been studied most extensively in the sea urchin eggs,but another echinoderm,starfish,whose eggs are much bigger and transparent,has facilitated experimental approaches using microinjection and fluorescent imaging methodologies.Thus in starfish,it has been shown that the sperm-induced Ca2+ increase in the fertilized egg can be recapitulated by several Ca2+ -evoking second messengers,namely inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate(InsP3) ,cyclic ADP-ribose(cADPr) and nicotinic acid adenine dinucleotide phosphate(NAADP) ,which may play distinct roles in the generation and propagation of the Ca2+ waves.Interestingly,it has also been found that the dynamic rearrangement of the actin cytoskeleton in the fertilized eggs plays pivotal roles in guiding monospermic sperm entry and in the fine modulation of the intracellular Ca2+ signaling.As it is well known that Ca2+ regulates the structure of the actin cytoskeleton,our finding that Ca2+ signaling can be reciprocally affected by the state of the actin cytoskeleton raises an intriguing possibility that actin and Ca2+ signaling may form a'positive feedback loop'that accelerates the downstream events of fertilization.Perturbation of the cortical actin networks also inhibits cortical granules exocytosis.Polymerizing actin bundles also compose the'acrosome process,'a tubular structure protruding from the head of fertilizing sperm. Hence,actin,which is one of the most strictly conserved proteins in eukaryotes,modulates almost all major aspects of fertilization.