ENGLISH 京都大学
125周年
所長挨拶 概要 教員一覧 研究分野・施設 共同利用・共同研究 大型プロジェクト 教育,入試 広報,公開行事,年報 新着論文,出版 霊長類研究基金 リンク アクセス HANDBOOK FOR INTERNATIONAL RESEARCHERS Map of Inuyama
トピックス
お薦めの図書 質疑応答コーナー ボノボ チンパンジー「アイ」 行動解析用データセット 頭蓋骨画像データベース 霊長類学文献データベース サル類の飼育管理及び使用に関する指針 Study material catalogue/database 野生霊長類研究ガイドライン 霊長類ゲノムデータベース 写真アーカイヴ ビデオアーカイヴ

京都大学霊長類研究所
郵便番号484-8506
愛知県犬山市官林
TEL. 0568-63-0567(大代表)
FAX. 0568-63-0085

本ホーム・ページの内容の
無断転写を禁止します。
Copyright (c)
Primate Research Institute,
Kyoto University All rights reserved.


お問い合わせ

English

Dead or alive? Predicting fetal loss in Japanese macaques (Macaca fuscata) by fecal metabolites
糞中代謝産物でニホンザルの胎児の生死を予測
Rafaela S.C. Takeshita, Michael A. Huffman, Keiko Mouri, Keiko Shimizu, Fred B. Bercovitch
概要

Dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate (DHEAS) is the main steroid product of the primate fetal adrenal during mid to late gestation and it plays a major role in providing estrogens needed for parturition. We tested the hypothesis that this hormone can indicate fetal health status and attempted to use fecal DHEAS (fDHEAS) to predict pregnancy outcome in Japanese macaques. The subjects were 16 adult females and 3 neonatal Japanese macaques living in captivity at the Primate Research Institute, Kyoto University. We classified females that gave birth to healthy infants as successful and females that gave birth to dead infants as stillbirth (late fetal loss) and miscarriage (early fetal loss). The remaining females did not become pregnant and were used as controls. We collected fecal samples from all cycling, pregnant, and post-pregnant females as well as the three neonates for analysis of fDHEAS, fecal estrogen (fE) and fecal progesterone (fP) by enzyme immunoassay. We found that fE and fP increased during gestation in both successful and stillbirth groups, but increased only during the first two months in the female that had a miscarriage. Levels of fDHEAS only increased in the second half of gestation in successful pregnancies. Neonates had extremely elevated concentrations of fDHEAS in comparison to post-parturition females, which confirms that DHEAS metabolites are a product of the fetal adrenal. Low DHEAS levels could be a marker of an unsuccessful pregnancy in primates. Monitoring fDHEAS levels can be useful in zoos and institute management and can be applied to wild and free-ranging populations.
書誌情報

Animal Reproduction Science Available online 19 October 2016
http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0378432016305590
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.anireprosci.2016.10.006
2016/11/09 Primate Research Institute