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Dive into the research topics where Marie-Christine Pere is active.

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Featured researches published by Marie-Christine Pere.


Journal of Animal Science | 2009

Dietary fiber for pregnant sows: influence on sow physiology and performance during lactation.

H. Quesnel; Marie-Christine Meunier-Salaün; A. Hamard; R. Guillemet; Michel Etienne; C. Farmer; Jean-Yves Dourmad; Marie-Christine Pere

This study was conducted to investigate the effects of feeding sows a bulky diet during gestation on their physiological and metabolic adaptations during the peripartum period, and to determine how these effects may relate to sow and piglet performances. From d 26 of gestation until farrowing, gilts were fed diets that contained 2.8 or 11.0% crude fiber (control and high-fiber diets, respectively, n = 9/group). Daily feed allowance provided the same amount of DE daily (33 MJ of DE/d). Throughout lactation, sows were allowed to consume a standard lactating sow diet ad libitum. Litters were standardized to 12 piglets beyond 48 h after birth. On d 105 of gestation, a jugular catheter was surgically implanted. Preprandial blood samples were collected from d 109 of gestation to the day after farrowing and on d 4, 18, and 26 of lactation. Meal tests and glucose tolerance tests were performed on d 109 of gestation and d 4 and 18 of lactation. During gestation, BW and backfat gain did not differ between treatment groups. During lactation, sows fed the high-fiber diet ate an average of 0.94 kg/d more than control sows (P < 0.02). Piglets born from sows fed the high-fiber diet grew faster than piglets from control sows (P = 0.03). Body weight and backfat losses did not differ between the 2 treatment groups. Sows fed the high-fiber diet during gestation had lesser concentrations of leptin before farrowing than control sows (P < 0.01). Leptin concentrations were negatively correlated with feed intake during lactation (P < 0.05). The prepartal increase in prolactin concentrations tended to be greater in sows fed the high-fiber diet than in control sows (P < 0.1). Preprandial concentrations of glucose, NEFA, lactate, and IGF-I fluctuated over time without significant treatment effect. Glucose half-life was shorter in late gestation than during both stages of lactation, but did not differ between sows in the 2 groups. In late gestation, the postprandial increases in glucose and insulin were delayed, and smaller, after a high-fiber meal than after a control meal. During lactation, glucose and insulin profiles after a standard meal did not differ between sows from treatment groups. In conclusion, the greater appetite of lactating sows fed a high-fiber diet during gestation does not seem related to changes in glucose and insulin metabolism and may be partly due to decreased secretion of leptin. The greater feed consumption was accompanied by a faster growth rate of piglets without sparing effect on maternal body reserves.


Journal of Animal Science | 2010

Reduced feed intake of lactating primiparous sows is associated with increased insulin resistance during the peripartum period and is not modified through supplementation with dietary tryptophan.

E. Mosnier; N. le Floc'h; Michel Etienne; P. Ramaekers; Bernard Sève; Marie-Christine Pere

The aim of this experiment was to investigate whether insulin resistance is related to the dietary concentration of Trp and the ADFI of primiparous sows having similar body conditions. Twenty-four primiparous sows were catheterized on d 97 of pregnancy. Blood samples were collected during 3 tests: after the ingestion of 1.5 kg of feed (meal test), after the intravenous infusion of 0.5 g of glucose/kg of BW (glucose tolerance test), and during an euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamp with an infusion rate of 100 ng of insulin x kg of BW(-1) x min(-1). Both tests were performed at 4 stages at approximately d 103 and 110 of pregnancy and at d 3 and 10 of lactation. Sows were fed a diet containing 0.16 or 0.26% of total Trp (suboptimal vs. slight excessive Trp supply according to recommendations for lactating sows) from d 104 of pregnancy after the first clamp until weaning. The dietary treatment did not result in differences in ADFI, BW, and backfat changes, and growth of piglets during lactation. Plasma Trp concentration was greater for the sows allocated to the slight excessive Trp diet than for the sows allocated to the suboptimal Trp diet (P < 0.05). Plasma glucose, NEFA, and urea profiles during the meal tests were not affected by the dietary treatment. At d 3 of lactation, the insulin concentration at 105 (P = 0.03) and 120 min (P = 0.04) after meal intake was less for the sows allocated to the slight excessive Trp diet than for the sows allocated to the suboptimal Trp diet. On d 10 of lactation, the glucose half life (P = 0.03) and the time needed to reach 25% of the area under the insulin curve (P = 0.04) during the tolerance test were less for the sows allocated to the slight excessive Trp diet than for the sows allocated to the suboptimal Trp diet. The glucose infusion rate during euglycemic hyperinsulinemic clamps was similar in the 2 Trp groups of sows. Irrespective of the dietary treatment, the ADFI of the sows was negatively related to the glucose half life during the glucose tolerance test and positively related to the glucose infusion rate during the clamp (P < 0.05). This relationship observed with the tests performed during early lactation was already found with the tests performed during late pregnancy (P < 0.02). Present findings indicate that a dietary Trp supply of 0.26% does not increase feed intake in lactating primiparous sows. This result indicates that the interest in a Trp supplementation during the peripartum period can be questioned. Irrespective of the dietary treatment, the reasons why sows with similar rearing conditions develop different rates of insulin resistance during pregnancy remain to be elucidated.


Journal of Animal Science | 2009

Feed intake in the multiparous lactating sow: Its relationship with reactivity during gestation and tryptophan status

E. Mosnier; Jean-Yves Dourmad; Michel Etienne; N. le Floc'h; Marie-Christine Pere; P. Ramaekers; Bernard Sève; J. van Milgen; Marie-Christine Meunier-Salaün

Voluntary feed intake in sows after parturition may be related to the capacity of the sow to cope with the numerous changes occurring around farrowing. This experiment was undertaken to investigate whether the feed intake during lactation was related to the reactivity of the sow during gestation and plasma Trp and cortisol concentrations. On d 58 of pregnancy, 37 sows were individually placed in a novel environment, and their behavior was observed during a 5-min open-field test. This test allowed the selection of 12 reactive (R) and 8 nonreactive (NR) sows for the study. Sows were fed 3 kg of a standard gestation diet/d before farrowing and a standard lactation diet ad libitum thereafter. The behavioral reactivity of sows when a human touched their neck in the farrowing crate was evaluated on d 72 of gestation, and their behavior during farrowing was analyzed. Sows were catheterized on d 70 of gestation, and blood samples were taken after an overnight fast on d 37 before farrowing, daily during the week before and the week after parturition, and on d 14 and 21 of lactation for plasma Trp and cortisol determination. The NR sows were less reactive to human contact (P=0.02), had a shorter farrowing duration (P=0.02), and tended to have a shorter birth interval between piglets (P=0.09) than the R sows. Feed intake was greater for the NR sows than for the R sows during wk 1 of lactation (P=0.02), as well as during the whole lactation (P=0.03). Plasma cortisol concentration was maximal on the day after farrowing (P=0.01) and returned to basal concentration within 4 d postpartum. No relationship was observed between sow behavior and plasma concentration of cortisol. For both groups of sows, plasma concentrations of Trp between d 2 and 4 postpartum were less than during gestation (P<0.05). The NR sows had decreased plasma Trp concentrations compared with the R sows during wk 1 of lactation (P=0.02). A low reactivity during gestation was associated with behavior of the sow that was favorable to piglet survival during farrowing, increased feed intake, and decreased plasma Trp concentration during wk 1 of lactation. Further research is needed to elucidate whether Trp or Trp metabolites are related to reactivity and ADFI of the reproducing sow.


General and Comparative Endocrinology | 2013

Spontaneous intra-uterine growth restriction modulates the endocrine status and the developmental expression of genes in porcine fetal and neonatal adipose tissue

Florence Gondret; Marie-Christine Pere; Sandrine Tacher; Sophie Daré; Christine Trefeu; Isabelle Le Huërou-Luron; Isabelle Louveau

Low birth weight is correlated with low adiposity at birth, a phenotype that influences neonatal survival and later adiposity. A better understanding of events affecting the fetal adipose tissue development and its functionality around birth is thus needed. This study was undertaken to examine the impact of spontaneous intra-uterine growth restriction (IUGR) on circulating concentrations of hormones and nutrients together with the developmental expression patterns of various genes in subcutaneous adipose tissue of pig fetus during the last third of pregnancy and just after birth. At 71 and 112 days post-conception and 2 days postnatal, pairs of same-sex piglets were chosen within litters to have either a medium (MBW) or a low (LBW) weight (n=6 pairs at each stage). The results indicate that IUGR counteracts the temporal fall of DLK1 gene expression in developing adipose tissue across gestation. It also attenuates the time-dependent increase in expression levels of many genes promoting adipocyte differentiation (PPARG, CEBPA) and lipogenesis (LPL, SREBF1, FASN, FABP4). Opposite responses to IUGR were observed for the IGF system, so that IGF1 mRNA levels were lower (P<0.001) but IGF2 mRNA levels were greater in adipose tissue of LBW piglets compared with MBW piglets. The plasma insulin concentration and the mRNA levels of insulin receptor (INSR) and insulin-responsive glucose transporter (GLUT4) in adipose tissue were also greater in LBW piglets at day 2 postnatal. The data indicate that IUGR delays the normal ontogeny of adipose tissue across gestation and affects the insulin and IGF axes around birth.


bioRxiv | 2018

ASICS: an R package for a whole analysis workflow of 1D 1H NMR spectra

Gaelle Lefort; Laurence Liaubet; Cécile Canlet; Patrick Tardivel; Marie-Christine Pere; H. Quesnel; Alain Paris; Nathalie Iannuccelli; Nathalie Vialaneix; Rémi Servien

In metabolomics, the detection of new biomarkers from NMR spectra is a promising approach. However, this analysis remains difficult due to the lack of a whole workflow that handles spectra pre-processing, automatic identification and quantification of metabolites and statistical analyses. We present ASICS, an R package that contains a complete workflow to analyse spectra from NMR experiments. It contains an automatic approach to identify and quantify metabolites in a complex mixture spectrum and uses the results of the quantification in untargeted and targeted statistical analyses. ASICS was shown to improve the precision of quantification in comparison to existing methods on two independant datasets. In addition, ASICS successfully recovered most metabolites that were found important to explain a two level condition describing the samples by a manual and expert analysis based on bucketting. It also found new relevant metabolites involved in metabolic pathways related to risk factors associated with the conditions. This workflow is available through the R package ASICS, available on the Bioconductor platform.


Reproduction Nutrition Development | 2000

Uterine blood flow in sows: Effects of pregnancy stage and litter size

Marie-Christine Pere; Michel Etienne


Journal of Animal Science | 2007

Influence of litter size on metabolic status and reproductive axis in primiparous sows

H. Quesnel; Michel Etienne; Marie-Christine Pere


Reproduction Nutrition Development | 2003

Materno-foetal exchanges and utilisation of nutrients by the foetus: comparison between species.

Marie-Christine Pere


Journal of Animal Science | 2007

Insulin sensitivity during pregnancy, lactation, and postweaning in primiparous gilts

Marie-Christine Pere; Michel Etienne


Journal of Animal Science | 2000

Adaptations of glucose metabolism in multiparous sows: effects of pregnancy and feeding level.

Marie-Christine Pere; Michel Etienne; Jean-Yves Dourmad

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H. Quesnel

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Laurence Liaubet

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Jean-Yves Dourmad

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Laurianne Canario

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Yvon Billon

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Bernard Sève

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Louis Lefaucheur

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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Magali San Cristobal

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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N. le Floc'h

Institut national de la recherche agronomique

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