25 results on '"Duchi R"'
Search Results
2. Developmental potential of bovine androgenetic and parthenogenetic embryos: a comparative study
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LAGUTINA I, LAZZARI G, DUCHI R, GALLI, CESARE, LAGUTINA I, LAZZARI G, DUCHI R, and GALLI C.
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Cell Nucleus ,Male ,Blastomeres ,Parthenogenesis ,Fertilization in Vitro ,Haploidy ,Embryo Transfer ,Diploidy ,Embryonic and Fetal Development ,Oocytes ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic - Abstract
In this study, we compared the developmental capacity of bovine haploid and diploid androgenetic and parthenogenetic embryos obtained by different methods. Androgenetic embryos were produced by piezo-intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) or in vitro fertilization (IVF) of enucleated oocytes with or without subsequent pronuclear transfer from one haploid zygote to another. Parthenogenetic embryos were obtained by activation of matured oocytes by ionomycin combined with cycloheximide or 6-dimethylaminopurine (DMAP) treatment. Only few cleaved androgenetic haploid embryos were able to compact (2.7%) and to form blastocysts (1.8%), while significantly more haploid parthenogenotes underwent compaction (24-37%) and a minority developed to blastocysts at different rates, depending on the activation procedure (cycloheximide 3%, 6-DMAP 14.5%). By contrast, development to blastocyst of diploid androgenotes, cloned androgenetic embryos, and parthenogenotes (31%, 39%, and 43%, respectively) was similar to IVF control embryos (35%). Cell number on Day 7 was higher for IVF blastocysts and decreased in consecutive order in diploid androgenotes, diploid parthenogenotes, and haploid uniparental embryos. Following transfer of diploid androgenetic embryos, a pregnancy was established and maintained up to Day 28.
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- 2003
3. Eruzione del vulcano Eyjafjallajokull: variazioni nelle proprieta' dellaerosol troposferico
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Duchi R., Marinoni A., Cristofanelli P., and Bonasoni P.
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- 2010
4. Studio dellatmospheric brown cloud in Himalaya
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Marinoni A., Duchi R., Cristofanelli P., Laj P., and Vuillermoz E.
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- 2010
5. Observations of North African forest fire plumes over North Italy
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Bonasoni P., Cristofanelli P., Arduini J., Bonafe' U., Calzolari F, Duchi R., Lanconelli C., Lupi A., Maione M., Marinoni A., Mazzola C., Roccato F., Tomasi C., and Vitale V.
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- 2008
6. Surface ozone variations during LS/UT transport events at the EverestPyramid Observatory (Nepal, 5079 m asl)
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Cristofanelli P., Bonasoni P., Bonafè U., Calzolari F., Duchi R., Marinoni A., Verza G.P., Vuillermoz E., and Sprenger M.
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- 2008
7. Targeting of a porcine EGFP line mediated by ZFNs to establish cloned red fluorescent primary cell lines suitable for Cre-mediated RMCE
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Perota, A., Lagutina, I., Duchi, R., Turini, P., Crotti, G., Colleoni, S., Lazzari, G., Franco Lucchini, and Galli, C.
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Settore AGR/17 - ZOOTECNICA GENERALE E MIGLIORAMENTO GENETICO ,Zinc finger nucleases ,Transgenic swine ,RMCE - Recombinase Mediated Cassette Exchange
8. High throughput production of multi-transgenic pig for xenotranplantation research
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Galli, C., Perota, A., Lagutina, I., Duchi, R., Colleoni, S., Franco Lucchini, and Lazzari, G.
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Settore AGR/17 - ZOOTECNICA GENERALE E MIGLIORAMENTO GENETICO ,xenotransplantation ,Transgenic swine
9. New atmospheric composition observations in the Karakorum region: Influence of local emissions and large-scale circulation during a summer field campaign
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P. Laj, Tony Christian Landi, U. Bonafè, Francescopiero Calzolari, Elisa Vuillermoz, Paolo Bonasoni, A. Broquet, Davide Putero, Paolo Cristofanelli, P. Villani, Marcello Alborghetti, G. P. Verza, Angela Marinoni, R. Duchi, Putero, D, Cristofanelli, P., Laj, P., Marinoni, A., Villani, P., Broquet, A., Alborghetti, M., Bonafè, U., Calzolari, F., Duchi, R., Landi, T.C., Verza, G.P., Vuillermoz, E., and Bonasoni, P.
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Pollution ,Aerosol particle ,Atmospheric Science ,Particle number ,Anthropogenic pollution ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Atmospheric sciences ,Combustion ,Karakorum ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Surface ozone ,Environmental Science(all) ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,geography ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Glacier ,Thermal wind ,Aerosol ,chemistry ,Carbon dioxide ,Climatology ,HYSPLIT ,Environmental science - Abstract
In this work we provide an overview of short lived climate forcers (SLCFs) and carbon dioxide variability in the Karakorum, by presenting results deriving from a field campaign carried out at Askole (3015 m a.s.l., Pakistan Northern Areas), by Baltoro glacier. By using an innovative embedded and transportable system, continuous measurements of aerosol particle number concentration (Np, 1571 ± 2670 cm−3), surface ozone (O3, 31.7 ± 10.4 nmol/mol), carbon dioxide (CO2, 394.3 ± 6.9 μmol/mol) and meteorological parameters have been performed from August 20th to November 10th 2012. The domestic combustion from the Askole village emerged as a possible systematic source of contamination in the valley, with short-lasting pollution events probably related to domestic cooking activities characterized by high values of Np (6066 ± 5903 cm−3). By excluding these local contamination events, mountain thermal wind regime dominated the diurnal variability of Np, O3 and CO2. In comparison to night-time, we observed higher Np (+354 cm−3) and O3 (+7 nmol/mol) but lower CO2 (−8 μmol/mol) in air-masses coming from the lower valley during the central part of the day. Part of the day-to-day atmospheric composition variability can be also ascribed to synoptic circulation variability, as observed by using HYSPLIT 5-day back-trajectories.
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- 2014
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10. Plasma estrone sulfate, clinical biochemistry, and milk yield of dairy cows carrying a fetus from a bull or its clone
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F. Abeni, Cesare Galli, Claudia Federici, G. Pirlo, Maurizio Capelletti, Giovanna Lazzari, Roberto Duchi, Riccardo Aleandri, Aldo Dal Prà, Giuseppina Maria Terzano, Francesca Petrera, M. Speroni, Abeni F, Capelletti M, Terzano GM, Federici C, Speroni M, Petrera F, Dal Prà A, Galli C, Duchi R, Lazzari G, Pirlo G, and Aleandri R.
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,DAIRY COW ,Estrone ,Cloning, Organism ,Clone (cell biology) ,fetu ,Ice calving ,Biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,NEFA ,Animal science ,Food Animals ,Pregnancy ,Estrone sulfate ,Lactation ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Animals ,Small Animals ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Fetus ,Plasma estrone sulfate ,Equine ,Sire ,BULL ,Milk ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,chemistry ,MILK YIELD ,Gestation ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
The aim of this article was to compare plasma estrone sulfate (E1SO4), clinical biochemistry, and milk yield of dairy cows carrying a female fetus from a bull (BULL) or from its clone (CLONE), evaluating also the relationship between the former variables and the birth weight of the newborn. Sixteen recipient dairy Friesian heifers (10 BULL and 7 CLONE) received a female embryo, obtained by in vitro embryo production and sexing by polymerase chain reaction with the semen of the BULL or the CLONE. Blood samples on all cows were obtained before feed distribution in the morning from jugular vein from 4 weeks before to 4 weeks after calving, to be analyzed for metabolic profile. The samples from late gestation were also analyzed for E1SO4 concentration. To separately assess the effect of calf birth weight (CBW), data were categorized as follows: low (46 kg; BWT-C). The plasma concentrations of β-hydroxybutyric acid (BHB, P=0.019), Na (P=0.002), Cl (P=0.026), strong cation-anion balance (P=0.020), total bilirubin (P=0.054), and α1-globulin (P=0.044) were higher in prepartum BULL recipients than those in CLONE, whereas BHB (P=0.021) and Mg (P=0.090) were higher in postpartum BULL recipients, while no differences were recorded in the remaining postpartum parameters. The CBW class had significant interaction with week of gestation on antepartum plasma estrone sulfate (P=0.021), whereas CBW per se affected antepartum plasma BHB (P=0.021), and nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA; P=0.011) being higher in BWT-C which also had the lower NEFA concentration during postpartum. Milk yield was unaffected by the sire used, both for quantitative and qualitative aspects. Cows carrying heavier fetus (BWT-C) had a different lactation affected by month compared with the other 2 CBW groups. From these results, there were no differences between BULL and CLONE recipients. Estrone sulfate, BHB, and NEFA may be used to predict CBW and provide different nutritional management during gestation.
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- 2014
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11. Influence of open vegetation fires on black carbon and ozone variability in the southern Himalayas (NCO-P, 5079 m a.s.l.)
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Paolo Bonasoni, Paolo Laj, G. P. Verza, Paolo Cristofanelli, R. Duchi, T. C. Landi, Davide Putero, Angela Marinoni, Francescopiero Calzolari, Putero, D., Landi, T.C., Cristofanelli, P, Marinoni, A., Laj, P., Duchi, R., Calzolari, F., Verza, G.P., and Bonasoni, P.
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Pollution ,Ozone ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesis ,Himalaya ,Air pollution ,Atmospheric sciences ,medicine.disease_cause ,Toxicology ,Fires ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Black carbon ,Nepal ,Soot ,Air Pollution ,medicine ,Foothills ,Air mass ,media_common ,Air Pollutants ,geography ,Biomass (ecology) ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,Himalayas ,General Medicine ,Vegetation ,15. Life on land ,Fire ,Health, Toxicology and Mutagenesi ,chemistry ,Air Pollutant ,13. Climate action ,Climatology ,Environmental science ,Energy source ,Environmental Monitoring ,Biomass burning - Abstract
We analysed the variability of equivalent black carbon (BC) and ozone (O3) at the global WMO/GAW station Nepal Climate Observatory-Pyramid (NCO-P, 5079 m a.s.l.) in the southern Himalayas, for evaluating the possible contribution of open vegetation fires to the variability of these short-lived climate forcers/pollutants (SLCF/SLCP) in the Himalayan region. We found that 162 days (9% of the data-set) were characterised by acute pollution events with enhanced BC and O3 in respect to the climatological values. By using satellite observations (MODIS fire products and the USGS Land Use Cover Characterization) and air mass back-trajectories, we deduced that 56% of these events were likely to be affected by emissions from open fires along the Himalayas foothills, the Indian Subcontinent and the Northern Indo-Gangetic Plain. These results suggest that open fire emissions are likely to play an important role in modulating seasonal and inter-annual BC and O3 variability over south Himalayas.© 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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- 2014
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12. Modeling Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis in hSOD1G93A Transgenic Swine
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Caterina Bendotti, Cesare Galli, Andrea Perota, Irina Lagutina, MN Chieppa, Cristiano Corona, Giovanna Lazzari, Cristina Casalone, Franco Lucchini, E. Vallino Costassa, Silvia Colleoni, Maria Caramelli, Roberto Duchi, A Grindatto, Chieppa MN, Perota A, Corona C, Grindatto A, Lagutina I, Vallino Costassa E, Lazzari G, Colleoni S, Duchi R, Lucchini F, Caramelli M, Bendotti C, Galli C, and Casalone C
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Genetically modified mouse ,Genetics ,Somatic cell ,animal diseases ,Transgene ,hSOD1 ,SOD1 ,nutritional and metabolic diseases ,Biology ,Gene mutation ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Neurology ,medicine ,Somatic cell nuclear transfer ,Neurology (clinical) ,Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis ,Transgenic Swine ,Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosi - Abstract
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal neurodegenerative disease that occurs in two clinically indistinguishable forms: sporadic (SALS) and familial (FALS), the latter linked to several gene mutations, mostly inheritable in a dominant manner. Nearly 20% of FALS forms are linked to mutations in the Cu/Zn superoxide dismutase (SOD1) gene. Research on ALS relies on transgenic models and particularly on mice carrying a glycine-to-alanine conversion at the 93rd codon (G93A) of the hSOD1 gene. Although G93A transgenic mice have been widely employed in clinical trials and basic research, doubts have been recently raised from numerous reliable sources about their suitability to faithfully reproduce human disease. Besides, the scientific community has already foreseen swine as an attractive and alternative model to nonhuman primates for modeling human diseases due to closer anatomical, physiological and biochemical features of swine rather than rodents to humans. On this basis, we have produced the first swine ALS model by in vitro transfection of cultured somatic cells combined with somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT). To achieve this goal we developed a SOD1G93A (superoxide dismutase 1 mutated in Gly93-Ala) vector, capable of promoting a high and stable transgene expression in primary porcine adult male fibroblasts (PAF). After transfection, clonal selection and transgene expression level assessment, selected SOD1G93A PAF colonies were used as nuclei donors in SCNT procedures. SOD1G93A embryos were transferred in recipient sows, and pregnancies developed to term. A total of 5 piglets survived artificial hand raising and weaning and developed normally, reaching adulthood. Preliminary analysis revealed transgene integration and hSOD1G93A expression in swine tissues and 360° phenotypical characterization is ongoing. We believe that our SOD1G93A swine would provide an essential bridge between the fundamental work done in rodent models and the reality of treating ALS.
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- 2013
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13. Differential gene expression in cumulus oocyte complexes collected by ovum pick up from repeat breeder and normally fertile Holstein Friesian heifers
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Laura Giannino, Cesare Galli, Caterina Cambuli, A. Lukaj, Roberto Puglisi, Rossana Capoferri, Maria Feligini, Andrea Galli, Giovanna Lazzari, Roberto Duchi, Graziella Bongioni, Puglisi R, Cambuli C, Capoferri R, Giannino L, Lukaj A, Duchi R, Lazzari G, Galli C, Feligini M, Galli A, and Bongioni G.
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Microarray ,FADS2 ,Oocyte Retrieval ,Biology ,OOCYTE ,GSTA4 ,Andrology ,Endocrinology ,Food Animals ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Gene expression ,medicine ,OLR1 ,Animals ,Gene ,Cumulus Cells ,General Medicine ,Oocyte ,Fold change ,Fertility ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Gene Expression Regulation ,Cattle ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Holstein Friesian heifers - Abstract
The aim of this study was to establish whether perturbed gene expression during cumulus oocyte development causes repeat breeding in cattle. In this study, a repeat breeder was defined as a normal estrous cycling animal that did not become pregnant after three inseminations despite the absence of clinically detectable reproductive disorders. Transcripts of genes extracted from cumulus oocyte complexes (COC) that were collected from three repeat breeder and three normally fertile Holstein Friesian heifers were compared. Up to 40 COC were collected from each heifer by means of repeated sessions of ovum pick up in the absence of hormonal stimulation; immediately plunged into liquid nitrogen; and stored at −80 °C until analysis. For each heifer, RNA was extracted from the pooled COC and hybridized on GeneChip® Bovine Gene Array (Affymetrix). Analysis of gene expression profiles of repeat breeder and control COC showed that 178 genes were differentially expressed (log2 fold change > 1.5). Of these genes, 43 (24%) were up-regulated and 135 (76%) were down-regulated in repeat breeder relative to control heifers. This altered pattern of expression occurred in genes involved in several cellular biological processes and cellular components such as metabolism, angiogenesis, substrate/ion transport, regulation/signaling, cell adhesion and cytoskeleton. From these, 13 genes potentially involved in cumulus oocyte growth were subjected to validation by qRT-PCR and nine genes (annexin A1, ANXA1; lactoferrin, LTF; interferon stimulated exonuclease 20 kDa, ISG20/HEM45; oxidized low density lipoprotein receptor 1, OLR1; fatty acid desaturase 2, FADS2; glutathione S-transferase A2 and A4, GSTA2 and GSTA4; glutathione peroxidase 1, GPX1; endothelin receptor type A, EDNRA) were confirmed to be differentially expressed. This study identified potential marker genes for fertility in dairy cattle.
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- 2013
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14. Embryonic genotype and inbreeding affect preimplantation development in cattle
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Andrea Galli, Silvia Colleoni, Franchesca D. Houghton, Giovanna Lazzari, Cesare Galli, Roberto Duchi, Lazzari G, Colleoni S, Duchi R, Galli A, Houghton FD, and Galli C
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Male ,Embryology ,CATTLE ,Embryo Culture Techniques ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,Cytokine Receptor gp130 ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,2. Zero hunger ,Genetics ,0303 health sciences ,Gene Expression Regulation, Developmental ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Embryo ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Embryo transfer ,Pedigree ,Phenotype ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,embryonic structures ,Female ,animal structures ,Fibroblast Growth Factor 4 ,Cattle Diseases ,Embryonic Development ,Gestational Age ,Semen ,Fertilization in Vitro ,Biology ,Crossbreed ,Andrology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine ,Animals ,Genetic Predisposition to Disease ,Blastocyst ,030304 developmental biology ,INBREEDING ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Superoxide Dismutase ,Embryogenesis ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Cell Biology ,Embryo Transfer ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Fertility ,Reproductive Medicine ,Infertility ,Embryonic genotype ,Brown Swiss ,Energy Metabolism ,Purebred - Abstract
Infertility in cattle herds is a growing problem with multifactorial causes. Embryonic genotype and level of inbreeding are among the many factors that can play a role on reproductive efficiency. To investigate this issue, we produced purebred and crossbred bovine embryos by in vitro techniques from Holstein oocytes and Holstein or Brown Swiss semen and analyzed several cellular and molecular features. In the first experiment, purebred and crossbred embryos, obtained from abattoir oocytes, were analyzed for cleavage, development to morula/blastocyst stages, amino acid metabolism and gene expression of developmentally important genes. The results indicated significant differences in the percentage of compacted morulae, in the expression of three genes at the blastocyst stage (MNSOD, GP130 and FGF4) and in the utilization of serine, asparagine, methionine and tryptophan in day 6 embryos. In the second experiment, bovine oocytes were collected by ovum pick up from ten Holstein donors and fertilized with the semen of the respective Holstein sires or with Brown Swiss semen. The derived embryos were grown in vitro up to day 7, and were then transferred to synchronized recipients and recovered on day 12. We found that purebred/inbred embryos had lower blastocyst rate on days 7–8, were smaller on day 12 and had lower expression of the trophoblast gene PLAC8. Overall, these results indicate reduced and delayed development of purebred embryos compared with crossbred embryos. In conclusion, this study provides evidence that embryo genotype and high inbreeding can affect amino acid metabolism, gene expression, preimplantation development and therefore fertility in cattle.
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- 2011
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15. Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer in Horses
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Silvia Colleoni, Irina Lagutina, Roberto Duchi, Cesare Galli, Giovanna Lazzari, Galli C., Lagutina I., Duchi R., Colleoni S., and Lazzari G.
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Nuclear Transfer Techniques ,Offspring ,Cloning, Organism ,Embryonic Development ,Biology ,Andrology ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Animals ,Horses ,Blastocyst ,Ovum ,Cloning ,Genetics ,Embryo culture ,Embryo ,Embryo Transfer ,Oocyte ,Embryo transfer ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Oocytes ,Somatic cell nuclear transfer ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
none 5 The cloning of equids was achieved in 2003, several years after the birth of Dolly the sheep and also after the cloning of numerous other laboratory and farm animal species. The delay was because of the limited development in the horse of more classical-assisted reproductive techniques required for successful cloning, such as oocyte maturation and in vitro embryo production. When these technologies were developed, the application of cloning also became possible and cloned horse offspring were obtained. This review summarizes the main technical procedures that are required for cloning equids and the present status of this technique. The first step is competent oocyte maturation, this is followed by oocyte enucleation and reconstruction, using either zona-enclosed or zona-free oocytes, by efficient activation to allow high cleavage rates and finally by a suitable in vitro embryo culture technique. Cloning of the first equid, a mule, was achieved using an in vivo-matured oocytes and immediate transfer of the reconstructed embryo, i.e. at the one cell stage, to the recipient oviduct. In contrast, the first horse offspring was obtained using a complete in vitro procedure from oocyte maturation to embryo culture to the blastocyst stage, followed by non-surgical transfer. Later studies on equine cloning report high efficiency relative to that for other species. Cloned equid offspring reported to date appear to be normal and those that have reached puberty have been confirmed to be fertile. In summary, horse cloning is now a reproducible technique that offers the opportunity to preserve valuable genetics and notably to generate copies of castrated champions and therefore, offspring from those champions that would be impossible to obtain otherwise. Galli C.; Lagutina I.; Duchi R.; Colleoni S.; Lazzari G. Galli C.; Lagutina I.; Duchi R.; Colleoni S.; Lazzari G.
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- 2008
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16. Developmental competence of equine oocytes and embryos obtained by in vitro procedures ranging from in vitro maturation and ICSI to embryo culture, cryopreservation and somatic cell nuclear transfer
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Irina Lagutina, Cesare Galli, Giovanna Lazzari, Silvia Colleoni, Roberto Duchi, Galli C, Colleoni S, Duchi R, Lagutina I, and Lazzari G.
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Nuclear Transfer Techniques ,animal structures ,Reproductive technology ,Biology ,Cryopreservation ,Andrology ,Endocrinology ,Food Animals ,Pregnancy ,Animals ,Horses ,Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic ,Ovum ,EMBRYO ,Embryo culture ,Embryo ,General Medicine ,Embryo, Mammalian ,Embryo transfer ,In vitro maturation ,Pregnancy rate ,EQUINE ,embryonic structures ,Oocytes ,Pregnancy, Animal ,Somatic cell nuclear transfer ,Female ,Animal Science and Zoology - Abstract
Development of assisted reproductive technologies in horses has been relatively slow compared to other domestic species, namely ruminants and pigs. The scarce availability of abattoir ovaries and the lack of interest from horse breeders and breed associations have been the main reasons for this delay. Progressively though, the technology of oocyte maturation in vitro has been established followed by the application of ICSI to achieve fertilization in vitro. Embryo culture was initially performed in vivo, in the mare oviduct or in the surrogate sheep oviduct, to achieve the highest embryo development, in the range of 18-36% of the fertilised oocytes. Subsequently, the parallel improvement of in vitro oocyte maturation conditions and embryo culture media has permitted high rates of embryo development from in vitro matured and in vitro cultured ICSI embryos, ranging from 5 to 10% in the early studies to up to 38% in the latest ones. From 2003, with the birth of the first cloned equids, the technology of somatic cell nuclear transfer has also become established due to improvement of the basic steps of embryo production in vitro, including cryopreservation. Pregnancy and foaling rates are still estimated based on a small number of in vitro produced equine embryos transferred to recipients. The largest set of data on non-surgical embryo transfer of in vitro produced embryos, from ICSI of both abattoir and in vitro-matured Ovum Pick Up (OPU) oocytes, and from somatic cell nuclear transfer, has been obtained in our laboratory. The data demonstrate that equine embryos produced by OPU and then cryopreserved can achieve up to 69% pregnancy rate with a foaling rate of 83%. These percentages are reduced to 11 and 23%, respectively, for cloned embryos. In conclusion, extensive evidence exists that in vitro matured equine oocytes can efficiently develop into viable embryos and offspring.
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- 2007
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17. Production and Quality of Bovine Oocytes and Embryos
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Silvia Colleoni, Nunzia Ponderato, P. Turini, Cesare Galli, Irina Lagutina, Roberto Duchi, G. Crotti, Giovanna Lazzari, Galli C., Duchi R., Crotti G., Turini P., Ponderato N., Colleoni S., Lagutina I., and Lazzari G.
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Blastomeres ,Zygote ,General Veterinary ,Embryo culture ,Embryo ,Fertilization in Vitro ,General Medicine ,Blastomere ,Anatomy ,Biology ,Embryo, Mammalian ,Oocyte ,Andrology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Human fertilization ,Embryo cryopreservation ,embryonic structures ,Oocytes ,medicine ,Animals ,Cattle ,Female ,Blastocyst - Abstract
Many factors influence the efficiency of the in vitro embryo production technology in cattle but the most important are the physiological conditions of the donor and the culture protocols for oocyte maturation and fertilization and for embryo culture from zygote to blastocyst. Therefore, general factors such as age, body conditions and herd management play a pivotal role together with more specific factors such as reproductive soundness and ovarian cyclicity. Given that good quality and competent oocytes are available a complex series of processes, including oocyte maturation, fertilization and culture of the derived zygotes, must be completed to generate viable embryos.
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- 2004
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18. High black carbon and ozone concentrations during pollution transport in the Himalayas: five years of continuous observations at NCO-P global GAW station
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Michela Maione, Davide Putero, Paolo Cristofanelli, Angela Marinoni, Tony Christian Landi, Francescopiero Calzolari, Paolo Bonasoni, Elisa Vuillermoz, R. Duchi, Paolo Laj, Marinoni, A, Cristofanelli, P., Laj, P., Duchi, R., Putero, D., Calzolari, F., Landi, T.C., Vuillermoz, E., Maione, M., and Bonasoni, P.
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Pollution ,Ozone ,Environmental Engineering ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Himalaya ,Monsoon ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Black carbon ,Animal science ,Nepal ,Environmental Chemistry ,Biomass burning ,General Environmental Science ,media_common ,Air Pollutants ,Troposphere ,Mean value ,General Medicine ,Carbon black ,Carbon ,chemistry ,Climatology ,Environmental science ,Seasonal cycle - Abstract
To study the influence of polluted air-mass transport carrying ozone (O3) and black carbon (BC) in the high Himalayas, since March 2006 the Nepal Climate Observatory at Pyramid (NCO-P) GAW-WMO global station (Nepal, 5079 m a.s.l.) is operative. During the first 5-year measurements, the O3 and BC concentrations have shown a mean value of 48 ± 12 ppb (± standard deviation) and 208 ± 374 ng/m3, respectively. Both O3 and BC showed well defined seasonal cycles with maxima during pre-monsoon (O3: 61.3 ± 7.7 ppbV; BC: 444 ± 433 ng/m3) and minima during the summer monsoon (O3: 40.1 ± 12.4 ppbV; BC: 64 ± 101 ng/m3). The analysis of the days characterised by the presence of a significant BC increase with respect to the typical seasonal cycle identified 156 days affected by "acute" pollution events, corresponding to 9.1% of the entire data-set. Such events mostly occur in the pre-monsoon period, when the O3 diurnal variability is strongly related to the transport of polluted air-mass rich on BC. On average, these "acute" pollution events were characterised by dramatic increases of BC (352%) and O3 (29%) levels compared with the remaining days. © 2013 The Research Centre for Eco-Environmental Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences.
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- 2014
19. Transport of short-lived climate forcers/pollutants (SLCF/P) to the Himalayas during the South Asian summer monsoon onset
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Tony Christian Landi, Davide Putero, G. P. Verza, Paolo Bonasoni, E. Vuillermoz, Francescopiero Calzolari, Shichang Kang, P. Stocchi, Angela Marinoni, Bhupesh Adhikary, Jing Ming, Paolo Cristofanelli, R. Duchi, Paolo Laj, Cristofanelli, P., Putero, D., Adhikary, B., Landi, T.C., Marinoni, A., Duchi, R., Calzolari, F., Laj, P., Stocchi, P., Verza, G., Vuillermoz, E., Kang, S., Ming, J., and Bonasoni, P.
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mineral dust ,Himalayas ,Atmospheric circulation ,Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment ,equivalent black carbon ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Storm ,Mineral dust ,Monsoon ,Atmospheric sciences ,Arid ,Aerosol ,Troposphere ,ozone ,Climatology ,Environmental science ,monsoon onset ,Precipitation ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
Over the course of six years (2006-2011), equivalent black carbon (eqBC), coarse aerosol mass (PM1-10), and surface ozone (O3), observed during the monsoon onset period at the Nepal Climate Observatory-Pyramid WMO/GAW Global Station (NCO-P, 5079 m a.s.l.), were analyzed to investigate events characterized by a significant increase in these short-lived climate forcers/pollutants (SLCF/P). These events occurred during periods characterized by low (or nearly absent) rain precipitation in the central Himalayas, and they appeared to be related to weakening stages (or 'breaking') of the South Asian summer monsoon system. As revealed by the combined analysis of atmospheric circulation, air-mass three-dimensional back trajectories, and satellite measurements of atmospheric aerosol loading, surface open fire, and tropospheric NOx , the large amount of SLCF/P reaching the NCO-P appeared to be related to natural (mineral dust) and anthropogenic emissions occurring within the PBL of central Pakistan (i.e., Thar Desert), the Northwestern Indo-Gangetic plain, and the Himalayan foothills. The systematic occurrence of these events appeared to represent the most important source of SLCF/P inputs into the central Himalayas during the summer monsoon onset period, with possible important implications for the regional climate and for hydrological cycles.
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- 2014
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20. Ovum pick up, intracytoplasmic sperm injection and somatic cell nuclear transfer in cattle, buffalo and horses: from the research laboratory to clinical practice
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Giovanna Lazzari, Roberto Duchi, Cesare Galli, Silvia Colleoni, Irina Lagutina, Galli C, Duchi R, Colleoni S, Lagutina I, and Lazzari G
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Nuclear Transfer Techniques ,Buffaloes ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Oocyte Retrieval ,Biology ,sperm ,Intracytoplasmic sperm injection ,OVUM PICK UP ,Andrology ,Food Animals ,Pregnancy ,medicine ,Animals ,Horses ,Sperm Injections, Intracytoplasmic ,BUFFALO ,Small Animals ,Animal species ,HORSE ,Somatic cell nuclear transfer ,Equine ,Embryo ,Sperm ,Embryo transfer ,Clinical Practice ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cattle ,Female ,Clinical skills - Abstract
Assisted reproductive techniques developed for cattle in the last 25 years, like ovum pick up (OPU), intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), and somatic cell nuclear transfer, have been transferred and adapted to buffalo and horses. The successful clinical applications of these techniques require both the clinical skills specific to each animal species and an experienced laboratory team to support the in vitro phase of the work. In cattle, OPU can be considered a consolidated technology that is rapidly outpacing conventional superovulation for embryo transfer. In buffalo, OPU represents the only possibility for embryo production to advance the implementation of embryo-based biotechnologies in that industry, although it is still mainly in the developmental phase. In the horse, OPU is now an established procedure for breeding from infertile and sporting mares throughout the year. It requires ICSI that in the horse, contrary to what happens in cattle and buffalo, is very efficient and the only option because conventional IVF does not work. Somatic cell nuclear transfer is destined to fill a very small niche for generating animals of extremely high commercial value. The efficiency is low, but because normal animals can be generated it is likely that advancing our knowledge in that field might improve the technology and reduce its cost.
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- 2013
21. A european perspective on animal cloning and government regulation
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Irina Lagutina, Roberto Duchi, Cesare Galli, Giovanna Lazzari, Galli C., Duchi R., Lagutina I., and Lazzari G.
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De facto ,Cloning (programming) ,business.industry ,Cloning, Organism ,Food, Genetically Modified ,Perspective (graphical) ,Biomedical Engineering ,Public Policy ,Legislation ,General Medicine ,Animal Welfare ,Public opinion ,Biotechnology ,Animals, Genetically Modified ,Europe ,Government regulation ,Consumer Product Safety ,Public Opinion ,SAFER ,Government Regulation ,Animals ,Animal cloning ,Business ,Genetic Engineering ,Law and economics - Abstract
The present situation in Europe can be described as the acceptance of the "precautionary" principle, by which any new biotech application is considered hazardous until proven safe beyond any possible doubt. This attitude is now so well established in the public opinion that it is very difficult for people to accept products (food in particular) that have been developed through biotech. People prefer traditional products, not because they are safer but because they were always there. For the reasons mentioned above, de facto there is no one significant European regulation on cloning, rather, every country has its own approach or variations.
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- 2004
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22. Transgene expression of green fluorescent protein and germ line transmission in cloned pigs derived from in vitro transfected adult fibroblasts
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Cesare Galli, Andrea Perota, Silvia Colleoni, Franco Lucchini, Emanuele Cozzi, Dario Brunetti, M Seveso, Irina Lagutina, Roberto Duchi, Fiorella Calabrese, Giovanna Lazzari, Brunetti D., Perota A., Lagutina I., Colleoni S., Duchi R., Calabrese F., Seveso M., Cozzi E., Lazzari G., Lucchini F., and Galli C.
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Male ,Swine ,Transgene ,Cloning, Organism ,Genetic Vectors ,Green Fluorescent Proteins ,Gene Expression ,Biology ,Transfection ,Germline ,Green fluorescent protein ,Animals, Genetically Modified ,Gene silencing ,Animals ,Vector (molecular biology) ,Transgenes ,Cells, Cultured ,Gene Transfer Techniques ,Fibroblasts ,Embryo Transfer ,Embryo, Mammalian ,Molecular biology ,In vitro ,Blastocyst ,Germ Cells ,Somatic cell nuclear transfer ,Female ,Developmental Biology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
The pig represents the xenogeneic donor of choice for future organ transplantation in humans for anatomical and physiological reasons. However, to bypass several immunological barriers, strong and stable human genes expression must occur in the pig's organs. In this study we created transgenic pigs using in vitro transfection of cultured cells combined with somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) to evaluate the ubiquitous transgene expression driven by pCAGGS vector in presence of different selectors. pCAGGS confirmed to be a very effective vector for ubiquitous transgene expression, irrespective of the selector that was used. Green fluorescent protein (GFP) expression observed in transfected fibroblasts was also maintained after nuclear transfer, through pre- and postimplantation development, at birth and during adulthood. Germ line transmission without silencing of the transgene was demonstrated. The ubiquitous expression of GFP was clearly confirmed in several tissues including endothelial cells, thus making it a suitable vector for the expression of multiple genes relevant to xenotransplantation where tissue specificity is not required. Finally cotransfection of green and red fluorescence protein transgenes was performed in fibroblasts and after nuclear transfer blastocysts expressing both fluorescent proteins were obtained.
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- 2008
23. Somatic cell nuclear transfer in horses: effect of oocyte morphology, embryo reconstruction method and donor cell type
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Irina Lagutina, P. Turini, Roberto Duchi, Nunzia Ponderato, G. Crotti, Giovanna Lazzari, Cesare Galli, Silvia Colleoni, Lagutina I., Lazzari G., Duchi R., Colleoni S., Ponderato N., Turini P., Crotti G., and Galli C.
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Embryology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Nuclear Transfer Techniques ,Reproductive Techniques, Assisted ,Somatic cell ,Cloning, Organism ,Embryonic Development ,Andrology ,Endocrinology ,Pregnancy ,biology.animal ,medicine ,Animals ,Blastocyst ,Horses ,Zona pellucida ,reproductive and urinary physiology ,Cells, Cultured ,Gynecology ,biology ,urogenital system ,Pregnancy Outcome ,Obstetrics and Gynecology ,Embryo ,Cell Biology ,Fibroblasts ,Embryo Transfer ,Embryo transfer ,Culture Media ,Abortion, Spontaneous ,Pregnancy rate ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Reproductive Medicine ,Foal ,embryonic structures ,Oocytes ,Somatic cell nuclear transfer ,Female - Abstract
The objective of the present work was to investigate and clarify the factors affecting the efficiency of somatic cell nuclear transfer (NT) in the horse, including embryo reconstruction, in vitro culture to the blastocyst stage, embryo transfer, pregnancy monitoring and production of offspring. Matured oocytes, with zona pellucida or after zona removal, were fused to cumulus cells, granulosa cells, and fetal and adult fibroblasts, and fused couplets were cultured in vitro. Blastocyst development to Day 8 varied significantly among donor cells (from 1.3% to 16%, P < 0.05). In total, 137 nuclear transfer-embryos were transferred nonsurgically to 58 recipient mares. Pregnancy rate after transfer of NT-embryos derived from adult fibroblasts from three donor animals was 24.3% (9/37 mares transferred corresponding to 9/101 blastocysts transferred), while only 1/18 (5.6%) of NT-blastocysts derived from one fetal cell line gave rise to a pregnancy (corresponding to 1/33 blastocysts transferred). Overall, seven pregnancies were confirmed at 35 days, and two went to term delivering two live foals. One foal died 40 h after birth of acute septicemia while the other foal was healthy and is currently 2 months old. These results indicate that (a) the zona-free method allows high fusion rate and optimal use of equine oocytes, (b) different donor cell cultures have different abilities to support blastocyst development, (c) blastocyst formation rate does not correlate with pregnancy fate and (d) healthy offspring can be obtained by somatic cell nuclear transfer in the horse.
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- 2005
24. Establishment, differentiation, electroporation, viral transduction, and nuclear transfer of bovine and porcine mesenchymal stem cells
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Gaetano Donofrio, C. Galli, Roberto Duchi, Giovanna Lazzari, Irina Lagutina, Silvia Colleoni, COLLEONI S, DONOFRIO G, LAGUTINA I, DUCHI R, GALLI C., and LAZZARI G.
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Nuclear Transfer Techniques ,Swine ,Cloning, Organism ,Population ,Biology ,Green fluorescent protein ,Cytosine ,Osteogenesis ,Transduction, Genetic ,medicine ,Animals ,Cell Lineage ,Von Kossa stain ,education ,Cells, Cultured ,Cell Nucleus ,education.field_of_study ,Cartilage ,Electroporation ,Mesenchymal stem cell ,Cell Differentiation ,Mesenchymal Stem Cells ,Molecular biology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Blastocyst ,Alkaline phosphatase ,Cattle ,Bone marrow ,Cell Division ,Developmental Biology ,Biotechnology - Abstract
Mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) reside in the bone marrow and have the potential for multilineage differentiation, into bone, cartilage, and fat, for example. In this study, bovine and porcine MSCs were isolated, cultured to determine their replication ability, and differentiated with osteogenic medium and 5-azacytine. Both bovine and porcine undifferentiated MSCs were electroporated and virally transduced to test the efficiency of genetic modification and the maintainance of differentiation ability thereafter. Nuclear transfer experiments were carried out with bovine and porcine MSCs, both at the undifferentiated state and following differentiation. Our results indicate that bovine and porcine MSCs have limited lifespans in vitro--approximately 50 population doublings. They can be efficiently differentiated and characterized along the osteogenic lineage by morphology, alkaline phosphatase, Von Kossa, oil red stainings, and RT-PCR. Electroporation and selection induce high levels of EGFP expression in porcine but not in bovine MSCs. Following genetic modification, MSCs retain their pluridifferentiation ability as parental cells. Cloned embryos derived from bovine and porcine undifferentiated MSCs and their derivatives along the osteogenic lineage give rise to consistently high preimplantation development comparable to adult fibroblasts.
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- 2005
25. Generation of pre-implantation pig SCNT embryos harboring the amyotrophic lateral sclerosis related hSOD1G93A gene
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Chieppa, Maria Novella, Perota, Andrea, Lagutina, Irina, Vallino Costassa, Elena, Grindatto, Anna, Palmitessa, Claudia, Corbellini, Debora, Tortarolo, Massimo, Colleoni, Silvia, Duchi, Roberto, Lazzari, Giovanna, Corona, Cristiano, Franco Lucchini, Bendotti, Caterina, Galli, Cesare, Casalone, Cristina, Chieppa M.N., Perota A., Lagutina L., Vallino-Costassa E., Grindatto A., Palmitessa C., Corbellini D., Tortarolo M., Colleoni S., Duchi R., Lazzari G., Corona C., Lucchini F., Bendotti C., Galli C., and Casalone C.
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somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) ,swine model ,PIG ,amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) ,Settore AGR/17 - ZOOTECNICA GENERALE E MIGLIORAMENTO GENETICO ,SCNT embryos ,hSOD1 G93A gene ,amyotrophic lateral sclerosi ,Cu/Zn superoxide-dismutase1 (SOD1)
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