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Research Article

Temperature-sensitive pathways may be involved in duck embryonic developmental recovery from blastoderm dormancy during hatching

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Pages 366-374 | Received 07 Jul 2019, Accepted 19 Feb 2020, Published online: 13 May 2020
 

ABSTRACT

1. Birds’ newly oviposited blastoderms can survive several weeks in a dormant state during low-temperature storage. Previous studies demonstrated that there is a critical temperature range from 19 to 27°C for chicken embryos. Within this range, the embryo will diapause in a dormant state; once the temperature rises above this range, the blastoderm will break dormancy.

2. Clarifying the mechanism that initiates duck embryo developmental recovery from blastoderm dormancy will be helpful to change temperature control to improve hatching in poultry production. It was hypothesised that there might be some temperature-sensitive genes involved in initiating duck embryo developmental recovery from blastoderm dormancy.

3. To test this hypothesis, the transcriptome of the newly oviposited duck blastoderm and duck embryo (incubated for 48 hours) were sequenced to screen for differentially expressed genes with functions that had been predicted by bioinformatics.

4. The results showed that there were 2416 differentially expressed genes between the two groups, 53 of which were involved in temperature-sensitive pathways. The protein-protein interaction network combined these 53 temperature-sensitive genes and another group of 65 genes, which enriched the development pathway. These results suggested that temperature-sensitive genes may be involved in growth and development related pathways.

Disclosure statement

The authors certify that there is no conflict of interest with any financial organisation regarding the material discussed in the manuscript.

Supplementary material

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here.

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