Title of article :
Mammary nutrient uptake in response to dietary supplementation
of rumen protected lysine and methionine in late and
early lactating dairy goats
Author/Authors :
Torben G. Madsen، نويسنده , , Lotte Nielsen، نويسنده , , Mette O. Nielsen، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
The objective of the present study was to evaluate how supplementation of lysine and methionine would affect mammary
supply and uptake of these two amino acids in early and late lactation, and the impact this would have on milk synthesis. Four
dairy goats were used in a 4 × 4 Latin square design in early and late lactation. The goats were fed a diet low in lysine and
methionine and supplemented with rumen protected lysine and methionine in order to get four treatments with low lysine and
lowmethionine content (C), low lysine and high methionine content (M), high lysine and lowmethionine content (L), and high
lysine and high methionine content (ML). Feed supplements of rumen protected lysine and methionine increased arterial lysine
and methionine concentrations, but mammary AV-differences did not change. However, only in early and not late lactation
lysine and methionine were found to be co-limiting for milk protein production on the basal diet. Mammary uptake of lysine
and methionine seem to be affected not only by supply, but also mammary synthetic capacity, since mammary tissue to some
extent seems capable of extracting these and possibly other amino acids according to its needs independently of arterial supply.
Mammary synthetic capacity seems to play a similar role for uptake of glucose and TAG, whereas uptake of acetate and BHB
mainly depend on arterial supply in both early and late lactation. The present results also indicate that mammary uptake of
lysine and possibly methionine is more sensitive to changes in arterial concentration in late compared to early lactation.
© 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords :
Lysine , methionine , Mammary nutrient uptake
Journal title :
Small Ruminant Research
Journal title :
Small Ruminant Research