Wool follicle morphology and cell proliferation in New Zealand Romney sheep: a seasonal comparison of fleeceweight-selected and control rams

Author:

Holle SA,Harris PM,Davies AS,Birtles MJ

Abstract

Effects of selection for high fleeceweight in the New Zealand Romney sheep were investigated in relation to the morphology of individual follicles and changes in the germinative cell population of the follicle bulb. Two-year-old Romney rams, 10 from each of two selection lines (Massey University fleeceweight-selected (FWT) and control (CLT) flock), were run together on pasture for a period from June to early December. At three times during this observation period (June, August and November) skin samples were taken from their midside flanks after local injection of bromodeoxyuridine (BrdU), to assess proliferation of bulb cells and several dimensional measurements of the follicle bulb and dermal papilla. FWT sheep had larger follicle dimensions than CLT sheep during winter and summer, with a greater number of proliferating bulb cells. Both flocks showed a seasonal change in follicle size, with a decline during winter, but the size of the dermal papilla was less affected than the germinative tissue area. Measurements of proliferation density (number of proliferating cells per area/volume of bulb tissue) suggest that changes in proliferation density do not contribute to flock differences in fleece production. However, during summer, FWT showed a 40% advantage over CLT sheep in hourly cell production based on data from three dimensional follicle bulb extrapolation. The different genotypes showed variations in width, as well as area of cortex and inner root sheath (IRS), measured across the top of the dermal papilla. The expression of these differences was further enhanced through seasonal influences, suggesting that there is an interaction between genetic/flock influences and seasonal influences on cell distribution to cortex and inner root sheath.

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences

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