J. Anim Sci.
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Journal of Animal Science, Vol 70, Issue 5 1471-1477, Copyright © 1992 by American Society of Animal Science


JOURNAL ARTICLE

The effect of bovine interferon-alpha I1 on pregnancy rate in heifers

C. M. Barros, G. R. Newton, W. W. Thatcher, M. Drost, C. Plante and P. J. Hansen
Departamento de Farmacologia, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Sao Paulo, Brazil.

Bovine interferon-alpha I1 (bIFN-alpha) may be useful for enhancing fertility in sheep and cattle because it has extensive sequence homology with ovine and bovine trophoblast protein-1 and, like those proteins, extends corpus luteum lifespan. To test the effectiveness of bIFN-alpha to enhance fertility, several experiments were performed in which inseminated heifers were given i.m. injections of bIFN-alpha approximately at the time of embryo-mediated signals that result in maintenance of the corpus luteum. In Exp. 1, heifers given 20 mg of bIFN-alpha daily from d 14 to 17 tended (P less than .07) to have lower pregnancy rates at d 110 to 112 of gestation (36/75; 48% vs 43/72; 60%). Similar results were obtained in Exp. 2 when heifers received a single injection of 40 mg of bIFN-alpha or placebo at d 13 after estrus; pregnancy rates at d 42 were 39/104 (38%) for bIFN-alpha and 47/98 (48%) for placebo. In Exp. 3, heifers were given gradually increasing doses of bIFN-alpha or placebo from d 11 to 19, because such a regimen had been shown to reduce the number of heifers experiencing hyperthermia after bIFN-alpha injection. Pregnancy rates were 42/95 (44%) for bIFN-alpha and 62/111 (56%) for placebo. Across all three experiments, pregnancy rates were lower (P less than .01) for heifers treated with bIFN-alpha (117/274; 43%) than for heifers treated with placebo (152/281; 54%). In conclusion, these results demonstrate that, under the administration systems used, bIFN-alpha does not increase pregnancy rate, but rather tends to reduce it.


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M.P. Green, L.D. Spate, J.A. Bixby, A.D. Ealy, and R.M. Roberts
A Comparison of the Anti-Luteolytic Activities of Recombinant Ovine Interferon-Alpha and -Tau in Sheep
Biol Reprod, December 1, 2005; 73(6): 1087 - 1093.
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Copyright © 1992 by the American Society of Animal Science.