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Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Fatty acids play an important role in the regulation of inflammation and oxidative stress. The birth and the neonatal period are characterized by a high risk of inflammation and an increased production of reactive oxygen species in the calf. The present study deals with the effects o...

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Autores principales: Liermann, Wendy, Uken, Katrin Lena, Schäff, Christine, Vogel, Laura, Gnott, Martina, Tuchscherer, Armin, Trevisi, Erminio, Stefaniak, Tadeusz, Sauerwein, Helga, Tröscher, Arnulf, Hammon, Harald Michael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8388434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34438626
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11082168
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author Liermann, Wendy
Uken, Katrin Lena
Schäff, Christine
Vogel, Laura
Gnott, Martina
Tuchscherer, Armin
Trevisi, Erminio
Stefaniak, Tadeusz
Sauerwein, Helga
Tröscher, Arnulf
Hammon, Harald Michael
author_facet Liermann, Wendy
Uken, Katrin Lena
Schäff, Christine
Vogel, Laura
Gnott, Martina
Tuchscherer, Armin
Trevisi, Erminio
Stefaniak, Tadeusz
Sauerwein, Helga
Tröscher, Arnulf
Hammon, Harald Michael
author_sort Liermann, Wendy
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Fatty acids play an important role in the regulation of inflammation and oxidative stress. The birth and the neonatal period are characterized by a high risk of inflammation and an increased production of reactive oxygen species in the calf. The present study deals with the effects of a different maternal fatty acid supply including the supplementation of saturated fatty acids by coconut oil, essential fatty acids, conjugated linoleic acid or a combination of essential fatty acids and conjugated linoleic acid on the immunological and oxidative as well as anti-oxidative status of neonatal calves. Maternal essential fatty acid as well as conjugated linoleic acid supply affected the inflammatory response and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status of the neonatal offspring. Essential fatty acids might have beneficial effects on the prevention of dysregulated inflammation after birth and reduced the plasma bilirubin concentrations in this period. Conjugated linoleic acid and saturated fatty acids might increase the inflammatory response. Similarly, plasma bilirubin increased, which in part might serve as a protector against oxidative stress in the early phase after birth. ABSTRACT: Fatty acids are known for their regulatory role in inflammation and oxidative stress. The present study investigated 38 calves born from dams, abomasally supplemented with coconut oil, essential fatty acids (EFA), conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) or EFA + CLA, according to immunological traits and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status for the first 5 days of life. On day 2 of life, plasma total bilirubin, cholesterol, interleukin 1-β and ferric ion reducing anti-oxygen power (FRAP) were lower in calves with than without maternal EFA supplementation, and FRAP additionally on day 4. On day 3, the concentrations of reactive oxygen metabolites were higher in calves with than without maternal EFA supplementation and additionally on day 5 together of retinol. Total leucocyte counts were decreased in the EFA group compared to the CLA group on day 5. Lymphocyte proportions decreased from day 1 to 5 only in the EFA + CLA group. On day 2, plasma total protein was higher in CLA and EFA + CLA than in EFA calves. Similarly, CLA calves had higher interleukin 1-β concentrations compared to EFA + CLA calves. FRAP was decreased by CLA on day 4. Overall, the maternal fatty acid supply affected the inflammatory response and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status of the neonatal offspring.
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spelling pubmed-83884342021-08-27 Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves Liermann, Wendy Uken, Katrin Lena Schäff, Christine Vogel, Laura Gnott, Martina Tuchscherer, Armin Trevisi, Erminio Stefaniak, Tadeusz Sauerwein, Helga Tröscher, Arnulf Hammon, Harald Michael Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Fatty acids play an important role in the regulation of inflammation and oxidative stress. The birth and the neonatal period are characterized by a high risk of inflammation and an increased production of reactive oxygen species in the calf. The present study deals with the effects of a different maternal fatty acid supply including the supplementation of saturated fatty acids by coconut oil, essential fatty acids, conjugated linoleic acid or a combination of essential fatty acids and conjugated linoleic acid on the immunological and oxidative as well as anti-oxidative status of neonatal calves. Maternal essential fatty acid as well as conjugated linoleic acid supply affected the inflammatory response and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status of the neonatal offspring. Essential fatty acids might have beneficial effects on the prevention of dysregulated inflammation after birth and reduced the plasma bilirubin concentrations in this period. Conjugated linoleic acid and saturated fatty acids might increase the inflammatory response. Similarly, plasma bilirubin increased, which in part might serve as a protector against oxidative stress in the early phase after birth. ABSTRACT: Fatty acids are known for their regulatory role in inflammation and oxidative stress. The present study investigated 38 calves born from dams, abomasally supplemented with coconut oil, essential fatty acids (EFA), conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) or EFA + CLA, according to immunological traits and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status for the first 5 days of life. On day 2 of life, plasma total bilirubin, cholesterol, interleukin 1-β and ferric ion reducing anti-oxygen power (FRAP) were lower in calves with than without maternal EFA supplementation, and FRAP additionally on day 4. On day 3, the concentrations of reactive oxygen metabolites were higher in calves with than without maternal EFA supplementation and additionally on day 5 together of retinol. Total leucocyte counts were decreased in the EFA group compared to the CLA group on day 5. Lymphocyte proportions decreased from day 1 to 5 only in the EFA + CLA group. On day 2, plasma total protein was higher in CLA and EFA + CLA than in EFA calves. Similarly, CLA calves had higher interleukin 1-β concentrations compared to EFA + CLA calves. FRAP was decreased by CLA on day 4. Overall, the maternal fatty acid supply affected the inflammatory response and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status of the neonatal offspring. MDPI 2021-07-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8388434/ /pubmed/34438626 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11082168 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Liermann, Wendy
Uken, Katrin Lena
Schäff, Christine
Vogel, Laura
Gnott, Martina
Tuchscherer, Armin
Trevisi, Erminio
Stefaniak, Tadeusz
Sauerwein, Helga
Tröscher, Arnulf
Hammon, Harald Michael
Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves
title Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves
title_full Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves
title_fullStr Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves
title_full_unstemmed Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves
title_short Effects of a Maternal Essential Fatty Acid and Conjugated Linoleic Acid Supplementation during Late Pregnancy and Early Lactation on Hematologic and Immunological Traits and the Oxidative and Anti-Oxidative Status in Blood Plasma of Neonatal Calves
title_sort effects of a maternal essential fatty acid and conjugated linoleic acid supplementation during late pregnancy and early lactation on hematologic and immunological traits and the oxidative and anti-oxidative status in blood plasma of neonatal calves
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8388434/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34438626
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11082168
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