Cargando…

The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Prenatal nutrition can reshape an animal’s developmental trajectory, with persistent long-term consequences for the progeny. In prenatal life, the effects induced by the intrauterine conditions can be expressed as changes in offspring growth and meat quality. Thus, there are diverse...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Barcelos, Sandra de Sousa, Nascimento, Karolina Batista, da Silva, Tadeu Eder, Mezzomo, Rafael, Alves, Kaliandra Souza, de Souza Duarte, Márcio, Gionbelli, Mateus Pies
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9404886/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36009734
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12162145
_version_ 1784773744039821312
author Barcelos, Sandra de Sousa
Nascimento, Karolina Batista
da Silva, Tadeu Eder
Mezzomo, Rafael
Alves, Kaliandra Souza
de Souza Duarte, Márcio
Gionbelli, Mateus Pies
author_facet Barcelos, Sandra de Sousa
Nascimento, Karolina Batista
da Silva, Tadeu Eder
Mezzomo, Rafael
Alves, Kaliandra Souza
de Souza Duarte, Márcio
Gionbelli, Mateus Pies
author_sort Barcelos, Sandra de Sousa
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Prenatal nutrition can reshape an animal’s developmental trajectory, with persistent long-term consequences for the progeny. In prenatal life, the effects induced by the intrauterine conditions can be expressed as changes in offspring growth and meat quality. Thus, there are diverse sources of variations that contribute to the variations reported for fetal-programming responses in beef cattle, making it difficult to interpret and apply the results. In this sense, finding a common factor among the studies with which to group them may offer an opportunity to quantify the fetal-programming effects holistically and to obtain more applicable responses. With the increasing number of publications, it is important to summarize the quantitative measurements available in the scientific literature. In the present study, data from 35 publications were used. We verified that there is a gap related to the effects of maternal nutrition to females, at the beginning of gestation, and in zebu and crossbred animals, indicating new perspectives for future fetal-programming studies. In summary, our findings highlight an association between prenatal energy and protein supply and its effects on the offspring birth weight, weaning weight, and the daily weight gain of pregnant beef cows during pregnancy. ABSTRACT: This meta-analysis aimed to identify knowledge gaps in the scientific literature on future fetal-programming studies and to investigate the factors that determine the performance of beef cows and their offspring. A dataset composed of 35 publications was used. The prenatal diet, body weight (BW), average daily gain (ADG) during pregnancy, and calf sex were elicited as possible modulators of the beef cows and their offspring performance. Then, the correlations between these variables and the outcomes of interest were investigated. A mixed multiple linear regression procedure was used to evaluate the relationships between the responses and all the possible explanatory variables. A knowledge gap was observed in studies focused on zebu animals, with respect to the offspring sex and the consequences of prenatal nutrition in early pregnancy. The absence of studies considering the possible effects promoted by the interactions between the different stressors’ sources during pregnancy was also detected. A regression analysis showed that prenatal diets with higher levels of protein improved the ADG of pregnant beef cows and that heavier cows give birth to heavier calves. Variations in the BW at weaning were related to the BW at birth and calf sex. Therefore, this research reinforces the importance of monitoring the prenatal nutrition of beef cows.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9404886
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-94048862022-08-26 The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation Barcelos, Sandra de Sousa Nascimento, Karolina Batista da Silva, Tadeu Eder Mezzomo, Rafael Alves, Kaliandra Souza de Souza Duarte, Márcio Gionbelli, Mateus Pies Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Prenatal nutrition can reshape an animal’s developmental trajectory, with persistent long-term consequences for the progeny. In prenatal life, the effects induced by the intrauterine conditions can be expressed as changes in offspring growth and meat quality. Thus, there are diverse sources of variations that contribute to the variations reported for fetal-programming responses in beef cattle, making it difficult to interpret and apply the results. In this sense, finding a common factor among the studies with which to group them may offer an opportunity to quantify the fetal-programming effects holistically and to obtain more applicable responses. With the increasing number of publications, it is important to summarize the quantitative measurements available in the scientific literature. In the present study, data from 35 publications were used. We verified that there is a gap related to the effects of maternal nutrition to females, at the beginning of gestation, and in zebu and crossbred animals, indicating new perspectives for future fetal-programming studies. In summary, our findings highlight an association between prenatal energy and protein supply and its effects on the offspring birth weight, weaning weight, and the daily weight gain of pregnant beef cows during pregnancy. ABSTRACT: This meta-analysis aimed to identify knowledge gaps in the scientific literature on future fetal-programming studies and to investigate the factors that determine the performance of beef cows and their offspring. A dataset composed of 35 publications was used. The prenatal diet, body weight (BW), average daily gain (ADG) during pregnancy, and calf sex were elicited as possible modulators of the beef cows and their offspring performance. Then, the correlations between these variables and the outcomes of interest were investigated. A mixed multiple linear regression procedure was used to evaluate the relationships between the responses and all the possible explanatory variables. A knowledge gap was observed in studies focused on zebu animals, with respect to the offspring sex and the consequences of prenatal nutrition in early pregnancy. The absence of studies considering the possible effects promoted by the interactions between the different stressors’ sources during pregnancy was also detected. A regression analysis showed that prenatal diets with higher levels of protein improved the ADG of pregnant beef cows and that heavier cows give birth to heavier calves. Variations in the BW at weaning were related to the BW at birth and calf sex. Therefore, this research reinforces the importance of monitoring the prenatal nutrition of beef cows. MDPI 2022-08-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9404886/ /pubmed/36009734 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12162145 Text en © 2022 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
Barcelos, Sandra de Sousa
Nascimento, Karolina Batista
da Silva, Tadeu Eder
Mezzomo, Rafael
Alves, Kaliandra Souza
de Souza Duarte, Márcio
Gionbelli, Mateus Pies
The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation
title The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation
title_full The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation
title_fullStr The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation
title_full_unstemmed The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation
title_short The Effects of Prenatal Diet on Calf Performance and Perspectives for Fetal Programming Studies: A Meta-Analytical Investigation
title_sort effects of prenatal diet on calf performance and perspectives for fetal programming studies: a meta-analytical investigation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9404886/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36009734
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12162145
work_keys_str_mv AT barcelossandradesousa theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT nascimentokarolinabatista theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT dasilvatadeueder theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT mezzomorafael theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT alveskaliandrasouza theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT desouzaduartemarcio theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT gionbellimateuspies theeffectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT barcelossandradesousa effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT nascimentokarolinabatista effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT dasilvatadeueder effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT mezzomorafael effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT alveskaliandrasouza effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT desouzaduartemarcio effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation
AT gionbellimateuspies effectsofprenataldietoncalfperformanceandperspectivesforfetalprogrammingstudiesametaanalyticalinvestigation