J.M. Jaskowski
University of Life Sciences in Poznań
18 Papers
52 Citations
J.M. Jaskowski is an academic researcher from University of Life Sciences in Poznań. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cyclin-dependent kinase & Embryo transfer. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 18 publications.
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Papers
Endometritis and pyometra in bitches: a review
B. Kempisty,Dorota Bukowska,M. Wozna,Hanna Piotrowska,M. Jackowska,A. Zuraw,Sylwia Ciesiółka,P. Antosik,H. Maryniak,E. Ociepa,Sz Porowski,K. P. Brüssow,J.M. Jaskowski,Michał Nowicki +13 more
TL;DR: A new overview of endometritis-pyometra is presented, which includes changes at the molecular level, e.g., the altered expression of genes crucial for the development of this disease.
In vitro maturation and degeneration of domestic cat oocytes collected from ovaries stored at various temperatures
TL;DR: The results indicate that storage of domestic cat ovaries at room temperature, even for a short time, can negatively influence the competence of oocytes to undergo nuclear maturation in vitro.
Assessment of transcript and protein levels contributing to cell cycle control and gap junction connections in morphologically variable groups of porcine cumulus-oocyte complexes.
P. Antosik,B. Kempisty,M. Jackowska,Hanna Piotrowska,Dorota Bukowska,M. Wozna,Margarita Lianeri,K. P. Brüssow,J.M. Jaskowski +8 more
TL;DR: These results demonstrate for the first time that cdk4 protein localization and all of the investigated transcript levels are associated with COC morphology and may be related to further maturation ability as well as developmental competence of oocytes.
Lab-on-chip quality classification of porcine/bovine oocytes
P. Szczepańska,Rafał Walczak,Jan Dziuban,M. Jackowska,B. Kempisty,J.M. Jaskowski,Sylwester Bargiel +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the quality evaluation of animal oocytes by VIS/NIR transmission cell-by-cell measurement (400-950 nm) is shown, and several porcine and bovine oocytes were tested.
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The effect of swim-up purification and incubation of cells on sperm viability in dogs of different ages.
Dorota Bukowska,B. Kempisty,Jan Sikora,M. Jackowska,M. Wozna,P. Antosik,Hanna Piotrowska,Joanna Budna,J.M. Jaskowski +8 more
TL;DR: It is shown for the first time that most viable sperm are recovered after an in vitro incubation step of 15 min (control samples in this study) because as the time of incubation increases so does the number of degenerated or damaged cells.