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Dive into the research topics where Paula Tribulo is active.

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Featured researches published by Paula Tribulo.


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2017

Actions of activin A, connective tissue growth factor, hepatocyte growth factor and teratocarcinoma-derived growth factor 1 on the development of the bovine preimplantation embryo

Jasmine Kannampuzha-Francis; Paula Tribulo; Peter J. Hansen

The reproductive tract secretes bioactive molecules collectively known as embryokines that can regulate embryonic growth and development. In the present study we tested four growth factors expressed in the endometrium for their ability to modify the development of the bovine embryo to the blastocyst stage and alter the expression of genes found to be upregulated (bone morphogenetic protein 15 (BMP15) and keratin 8, type II (KRT8)) or downregulated (NADH dehydrogenase 1 (ND1) and S100 calcium binding protein A10 (S100A10)) in embryos competent to develop to term. Zygotes were treated at Day 5 with 0.01, 0.1 or 1.0nM growth factor. The highest concentration of activin A increased the percentage of putative zygotes that developed to the blastocyst stage. Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) increased the number of cells in the inner cell mass (ICM), decreased the trophectoderm:ICM ratio and increased blastocyst expression of KRT8 and ND1. The lowest concentration of hepatocyte growth factor (HGF) reduced the percentage of putative zygotes becoming blastocysts. Teratocarcinoma-derived growth factor 1 increased total cell number at 0.01nM and expression of S100A10 at 1.0nM, but otherwise had no effects. Results confirm the prodevelopmental actions of activin A and indicate that CTGF may also function as an embryokine by regulating the number of ICM cells in the blastocyst and altering gene expression. Low concentrations of HGF were inhibitory to development.


Biology of Reproduction | 2017

A single nucleotide polymorphism in COQ9 affects mitochondrial and ovarian function and fertility in Holstein cows

M. Sofia Ortega; Stephanie E. Wohlgemuth; Paula Tribulo; Luiz G. Siqueira; D.J. Null; J.B. Cole; Marcus V. Da Silva; P. J. Hansen

Abstract A single missense mutation at position 159 of coenzyme Q9 (COQ9) (G→A; rs109301586) has been associated with genetic variation in fertility in Holstein cattle, with the A allele associated with higher fertility. COQ9 is involved in the synthesis of coenzyme COQ10, a component of the electron transport system of the mitochondria. Here we tested whether reproductive phenotype is associated with the mutation and evaluated functional consequences for cellular oxygen metabolism, body weight changes, and ovarian function. The mutation in COQ9 modifies predicted tertiary protein structure and affected mitochondrial respiration of peripheral blood mononuclear cells. The A allele was associated with low resting oxygen consumption and high electron transport system capacity. Phenotypic measurements for fertility were evaluated for up to five lactations in a population of 2273 Holstein cows. There were additive effects of the mutation (P < 0.05) in favor of the A allele for pregnancy rate, interval from calving to conception, and services per conception. There was no association of genotype with milk production or body weight changes postpartum. The mutation in COQ9 affected ovarian function; the A allele was associated with increased mitochondrial DNA copy number in oocytes, and there were overdominance effects for COQ9 expression in oocytes, follicle number, and antimullerian hormone concentrations. Overall, results show how a gene involved in mitochondrial function is associated with overall fertility, possibly in part by affecting oocyte quality. Summary Sentence A SNP in COQ9 was described that changes predicted protein structure, is associated with altered mitochondrial afunction, and that modulates reproductive function in dairy cattle, possibly by regulating oocyte quality.


Reproduction | 2017

WNT regulation of embryonic development likely involves pathways independent of nuclear CTNNB1

Paula Tribulo; James I. Moss; Manabu Ozawa; Zongliang Jiang; Cindy Tian; P. J. Hansen

The bovine was used to examine the potential for WNT signaling to affect the preimplantation embryo. Expression of seven key genes involved in canonical WNT signaling declined to a nadir at the morula or blastocyst stage. Expression of 80 genes associated with WNT signaling in the morula and inner cell mass (ICM) and trophectoderm (TE) of the blastocyst was also evaluated. Many genes associated with WNT signaling were characterized by low transcript abundance. Seven genes were different between ICM and TE, and all of them were overexpressed in TE as compared to ICM, including WNT6, FZD1, FZD7, LRP6, PORCN, APC and SFRP1 Immunoreactive CTNNB1 was localized primarily to the plasma membrane at all stages examined from the 2-cell to blastocyst stages of development. Strikingly, neither CTNNB1 nor non-phospho (i.e., active) CTNNB1 was observed in the nucleus of blastomeres at any stage of development even after the addition of WNT activators to culture. In contrast, CTNNB1 associated with the plasma membrane was increased by activators of WNT signaling. The planar cell polarity pathway (PCP) could be activated in the embryo as indicated by an experiment demonstrating an increase in phospho-JNK in the nucleus of blastocysts treated with the non-canonical WNT11. Furthermore, WNT11 improved development to the blastocyst stage. In conclusion, canonical WNT signaling is attenuated in the preimplantation bovine embryo but WNT can activate the PCP component JNK. Thus, regulation of embryonic development by WNT is likely to involve activation of pathways independent of nuclear actions of CTNNB1.


Biology of Reproduction | 2017

Colony-stimulating factor 2 acts from days 5 to 7 of development to modify programming of the bovine conceptus at day 86 of gestation

Luiz G. Siqueira; Paula Tribulo; Zhiyuan Chen; Anna C. Denicol; M. Sofia Ortega; Verónica M. Negrón-Pérez; Jasmine Kannampuzha-Francis; K. G. Pohler; Rocío Melissa Rivera; Peter J. Hansen

Abstract Colony-stimulating factor 2 (CSF2) is an embryokine that improves competence of the embryo to establish pregnancy and which may participate in developmental programming. We tested whether culture of bovine embryos with CSF2 alters fetal development and alleviates abnormalities associated with in vitro production (IVP) of embryos. Pregnancies were established by artificial insemination (AI), transfer of an IVP embryo (IVP), or transfer of an IVP embryo treated with 10 ng/ml CSF2 from day 5 to 7 of development (CSF2). Pregnancies were produced using X-sorted semen. Female singleton conceptuses were collected on day 86 of gestation. There were few morphological differences between groups, although IVP and CSF2 fetuses were heavier than AI fetuses. Bicarbonate concentration in allantoic fluid was lower for IVP than for AI or CSF2. Expression of 92 genes in liver, placenta, and muscle was determined. The general pattern for liver and placenta was for IVP to alter expression and for CSF2 to sometimes reverse this effect. For muscle, CSF2 affected gene expression but did not generally reverse effects of IVP. Levels of methylation for each of the three tissues at 12 loci in the promoter of insulin-like growth factor 2 (IGF2) and five in the promoter of growth factor receptor bound protein 10 were unaffected by treatment except for CSF2 effects on two CpG for IGF2 in placenta and muscle. In conclusion, CSF2 can act as a developmental programming agent but alone is not able to abolish the adverse effects of IVP on fetal characteristics. Summary Sentence Production of embryos in vitro (IVP) is associated with alterations in fetal morphology and gene expression at day 86 of gestation; addition of CSF2 to embryo culture altered features of the fetus but did not abolish abnormalities associated with IVP.


Journal of Dairy Science | 2018

Identification of potential embryokines in the bovine reproductive tract

Paula Tribulo; Luiz G. Siqueira; Lilian J. Oliveira; T.L. Scheffler; Peter J. Hansen

Knowledge of the molecules used by the maternal reproductive tract to regulate development of the preimplantation embryo is largely incomplete. The goal of the present experiment was to identify candidates for this function. The approach was to assess expression patterns in the endometrium and oviduct of 93 genes encoding for hormones, growth factors, chemokines, cytokines, and WNT-related molecules. Results show that all of the genes were expressed in the reproductive tract. Expression in oviduct was affected by day of the estrous cycle for 21 genes with 11 genes having highest expression at estrus (CCL21, CTGF, CXCL10, CXCL16, DKK3, FGF10, IL18, IL33, IL34, PGF, and SFRP2), 1 gene at d 3 (WNT4), 8 at d 5 (BMP7, HGF, IL6, SFRP1, TGFB1, WIF1, WNT2, and WNT5A), and 1 at d 7 (IK). For endometrium, expression of 34 genes was affected by day of the estrous cycle with 11 having highest expression at d 0 (BMP7, CCL14, CCL21, CCL26, CTGF, CXCL12, IGF2, IL16, IL33, SFRP2, and WIF1), 2 at d 3 (HDGF, IL15), 14 at d 5 (CSF2, CX3CL1, CXCL3, FGF1, FGF2, GRO1, HGF, IGF1, IL1B, IL8, SFRP1, SFRP4, WNT5A, and WNT16), and 7 at d 7 (CXCL16, FGF13, HDGFRP2, TDGF1, VEGFB, WNT7A, and WNT11). Results are consistent with a set of genes regulated by estradiol early in the estrous cycle and another set regulated by progesterone later in the cycle. The cell-signaling genes identified here as being expressed in the oviduct and endometrium could serve to regulate early embryonic development in a stage-of-pregnancy-specific manner.


Biology of Reproduction | 2017

Consequences of endogenous and exogenous WNT signaling for development of the preimplantation bovine embryo

Paula Tribulo; B. C. S. Leão; Khoboso Christina Lehloenya; Gisele Zoccal Mingoti; Peter J. Hansen

Abstract The specific role of WNT signaling during preimplantation development remains unclear. Here, we evaluated consequences of activation and inhibition of β-catenin (CTNNB1)-dependent and -independent WNT signaling in the bovine preimplantation embryo. Activation of CTNNB1-mediated WNT signaling by the agonist 2-amino-4-(3,4-(methylenedioxy)benzylamino)-6-(3-methoxyphenyl)pyrimidine (AMBMP) and a glycogen synthase kinase 3 inhibitor reduced development to the blastocyst stage. Moreover, the antagonist of WNT signaling, dickkopf-related protein 1 (DKK1), alleviated the negative effect of AMBMP on development via reduction of CTNNB1. Based on labeling for phospho c-Jun N-terminal kinase, there was no evidence that DKK1 activated the planar cell polarity (PCP) pathway. Inhibition of secretion of endogenous WNTs did not affect development but increased number of cells in the inner cell mass (ICM). In contrast, DKK1 did not affect number of ICM or trophectoderm (TE) cells, suggesting that embryo-derived WNTs regulate ICM proliferation through a mechanism independent of CTNNB1. In addition, DKK1 did not affect the number of cells positive for the transcription factor yes-associated protein 1 (YAP1) involved in TE formation. In fact, DKK1 decreased YAP1. In contrast, exposure of embryos to WNT family member 7A (WNT7A) improved blastocyst development, inhibited the PCP pathway, and did not affect amounts of CTNNB1. Results indicate that embryo-derived WNTs are dispensable for blastocyst formation but participate in regulation of ICM proliferation, likely through a mechanism independent of CTNNB1. The response to AMBMP and WNT7A leads to the hypothesis that maternally derived WNTs can play a positive or negative role in regulation of preimplantation development. Summary Sentence Endogenous WNTs are dispensable for blastocyst formation, but participate in the regulation of ICM proliferation, likely through a mechanism independent of β-catenin.


Journal of Animal Science | 2017

Consequences of exposure of embryos produced in vitro in a serum-containing medium to dickkopf-related protein 1 and colony stimulating factor 2 on blastocyst yield, pregnancy rate, and birth weight

Paula Tribulo; B. H. Bernal Ballesteros; A. Ruiz; A. Tríbulo; R. J. Tríbulo; H. E. Tríbulo; G. A. Bo; Peter J. Hansen

Embryokines are molecules secreted by the mother that regulate embryonic development. Among these molecules in cattle are colony stimulating factor 2 (CSF2) and dickkopf-related protein 1 (DKK1). Here, we evaluated actions of CSF2 and DKK1 alone or in combination on characteristics of embryos produced in vitro in the presence of serum. A total of 70 beef cows from 4 farms were subjected to oocyte retrieval on 1 to 4 occasions. Within each farm, donors were randomly allocated to 1 of 4 treatment groups (vehicle, CSF2, DKK1, CSF2 + DKK1). Embryos from a given donor were always exposed to the same treatment. Treatments were added to the culture medium on d 5 after insemination, and blastocyst stage embryos were transferred to recipient females 2 d later. Treatment did not affect the percent of oocytes or cleaved embryos that developed to the blastocyst stage or the percent of recipients that became pregnant after embryo transfer. However, calves derived from embryos treated with DKK1 were smaller at birth, regardless of CSF2 treatment. Results indicate no effects of addition of CSF2 or DKK1 to culture of embryos produced in vitro with serum-containing medium on development to the blastocyst stage or competence to establish pregnancy after transfer to recipients. The fact that embryos cultured with DKK1 resulted in calves with reduced birth weight illustrates the potential ability of this embryokine to program postnatal phenotype. Results support the concept that properties of the offspring can be programmed as early as the preimplantation period.


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2018

83 Effect of Synchronization Treatment and Estrus Expression on Conception Rates and Pregnancy Losses in Recipients Receiving In Vitro-Produced Embryos

A. Cedeño; Paula Tribulo; A. Tribulo; J. L. Barajas; J. Ortega; S. Andrada; D. Lozano; I. Monguillot; A. Brandan; R. Tríbulo; H. Tribulo; G.A. Bo


BMC Developmental Biology | 2018

Effects of sex on response of the bovine preimplantation embryo to insulin-like growth factor 1, activin A, and WNT7A

Paula Tribulo; Gulnur Jumatayeva; Khoboso Christina Lehloenya; James I. Moss; Verónica M. Negrón-Pérez; Peter J. Hansen


Reproduction, Fertility and Development | 2016

175 CONSEQUENCES OF IN VITRO PRODUCTION OF EMBRYOS WITH OR WITHOUT COLONY-STIMULATING FACTOR 2 IN CULTURE MEDIUM ON MORPHOMETRIC FEATURES OF THE BOVINE CONCEPTUS AT DAY 86 OF GESTATION

Luiz G. Siqueira; Paula Tribulo; Anna C. Denicol; M. S. Ortega; Verónica M. Negrón-Pérez; Jasmine Kannampuzha-Francis; P. J. Hansen

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Cindy Tian

University of Connecticut

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