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Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes

The transition from a high forage to a high concentrate diet is an important milestone for beef cattle moving from a stocker system to the feedlot. However, little is known about how this transition affects the rumen epithelial gene expression. This study assessed the effects of the transition from...

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Autores principales: Novak, Taylor E., Rodriguez‐Zas, Sandra L., Southey, Bruce R., Starkey, Jessica D., Stockler, Ricardo M., Alfaro, Gastón F., Moisá, Sonia J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6899929/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31483547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13189
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author Novak, Taylor E.
Rodriguez‐Zas, Sandra L.
Southey, Bruce R.
Starkey, Jessica D.
Stockler, Ricardo M.
Alfaro, Gastón F.
Moisá, Sonia J.
author_facet Novak, Taylor E.
Rodriguez‐Zas, Sandra L.
Southey, Bruce R.
Starkey, Jessica D.
Stockler, Ricardo M.
Alfaro, Gastón F.
Moisá, Sonia J.
author_sort Novak, Taylor E.
collection PubMed
description The transition from a high forage to a high concentrate diet is an important milestone for beef cattle moving from a stocker system to the feedlot. However, little is known about how this transition affects the rumen epithelial gene expression. This study assessed the effects of the transition from a high forage to a high concentrate diet as well as the transition from a high concentrate to a high forage diet on a variety of genes as well as ruminal papillae morphology in rumen fistulated Jersey steers. Jersey steers (n = 5) were fed either a high forage diet (80% forage and 20% grain) and transitioned to a high concentrate diet (20% forage and 80% grain) or a high concentrate diet (40% forage and 60% grain) and transitioned to a high forage diet (100% forage). Papillae from the rumen were collected for histology and RT‐qPCR analysis. Body weight had a tendency for significant difference (p = .08). Histological analysis did not show changes in papillae length or width in steers transitioning from a high forage to a high concentrate diet or vice versa (p > .05). Genes related to cell membrane structure (CLDN1, CLDN4, DSG1), fatty acid metabolism (CPT1A, ACADSB), glycolysis (PFKL), ketogenesis (HMGCL, HMGCS2, ACAT1), lactate/pyruvate (LDHA), oxidative stress (NQO1), tissue growth (AKT3, EGFR, EREG, IGFBP5, IRS1) and the urea cycle (SLC14A1) were considered in this study. Overall, genes related to fatty acid metabolism (ACADSB) and growth and development (AKT3 and IGFBP5) had a tendency for a treatment × day on trial interaction effect. These profiles may be indicators of rumen epithelial adaptations in response to changes in diet. In conclusion, these results indicate that changes in the composition of the diet can alter the expression of genes with specific functions in rumen epithelial metabolism.
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spelling pubmed-68999292019-12-20 Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes Novak, Taylor E. Rodriguez‐Zas, Sandra L. Southey, Bruce R. Starkey, Jessica D. Stockler, Ricardo M. Alfaro, Gastón F. Moisá, Sonia J. J Anim Physiol Anim Nutr (Berl) Original Articles The transition from a high forage to a high concentrate diet is an important milestone for beef cattle moving from a stocker system to the feedlot. However, little is known about how this transition affects the rumen epithelial gene expression. This study assessed the effects of the transition from a high forage to a high concentrate diet as well as the transition from a high concentrate to a high forage diet on a variety of genes as well as ruminal papillae morphology in rumen fistulated Jersey steers. Jersey steers (n = 5) were fed either a high forage diet (80% forage and 20% grain) and transitioned to a high concentrate diet (20% forage and 80% grain) or a high concentrate diet (40% forage and 60% grain) and transitioned to a high forage diet (100% forage). Papillae from the rumen were collected for histology and RT‐qPCR analysis. Body weight had a tendency for significant difference (p = .08). Histological analysis did not show changes in papillae length or width in steers transitioning from a high forage to a high concentrate diet or vice versa (p > .05). Genes related to cell membrane structure (CLDN1, CLDN4, DSG1), fatty acid metabolism (CPT1A, ACADSB), glycolysis (PFKL), ketogenesis (HMGCL, HMGCS2, ACAT1), lactate/pyruvate (LDHA), oxidative stress (NQO1), tissue growth (AKT3, EGFR, EREG, IGFBP5, IRS1) and the urea cycle (SLC14A1) were considered in this study. Overall, genes related to fatty acid metabolism (ACADSB) and growth and development (AKT3 and IGFBP5) had a tendency for a treatment × day on trial interaction effect. These profiles may be indicators of rumen epithelial adaptations in response to changes in diet. In conclusion, these results indicate that changes in the composition of the diet can alter the expression of genes with specific functions in rumen epithelial metabolism. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2019-09-04 2019-11 /pmc/articles/PMC6899929/ /pubmed/31483547 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13189 Text en © 2019 The Authors. Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition published by Blackwell Verlag GmbH This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Novak, Taylor E.
Rodriguez‐Zas, Sandra L.
Southey, Bruce R.
Starkey, Jessica D.
Stockler, Ricardo M.
Alfaro, Gastón F.
Moisá, Sonia J.
Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
title Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
title_full Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
title_fullStr Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
title_full_unstemmed Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
title_short Jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
title_sort jersey steer ruminal papillae histology and nutrigenomics with diet changes
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6899929/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31483547
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jpn.13189
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