4.7 Article

Effect of lipid supplementation on milk odd- and branched-chain fatty acids in dairy cows

Journal

JOURNAL OF DAIRY SCIENCE
Volume 99, Issue 8, Pages 6311-6323

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.3168/jds.2015-10746

Keywords

odd- and branched-chain fatty acids; soybean oil; prilled fat; rumen fermentation; milk fat

Funding

  1. Industrial Research Chair program of the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (Ottawa, ON, Canada)
  2. Dairy Farmers of Canada (Ottawa, ON, Canada)
  3. Novalait (Quebec, QC, Canada)
  4. Valacta (Ste-Anne-de-Bellevue, QC, Canada)
  5. Les Producteurs de Lait du Quebec (Longueuil, QC, Canada)
  6. l'AlinistZTe dc l'Agriculture, des Pecheries et de l'Alimentation du Quebec (Quebec, QC, Canada)

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Eight ruminally fistulated, multiparous Holstein cows were arranged in a double 4 x 4 Latin square with 14-d periods to investigate the effects of lipid supplementation on performance, rumen parameters, the milk odd- arid branched -chain fatty acid (OBCFA) profile, and the relationships between milk OBCFA and rumen parameters. Lipid supplementation is known to inhibit microbial growth in the rumen, decrease de novo microbial fatty acid synthesis, and increase die uptake of circulating fatty acids by the mammary gland; treatments were selected to isolate these effects on the milk OBCFA profile. The 4 treatments were (1) a lipid -free emulsion medium infused in the rumen (CTL), (2) soybean oil as a source of polyunsaturated fatty acids infused in the rumen (RSO), (3) saturated fatty acids (38% 16:0, 40% 18:0) infused in the rumen (RSF), and (4) saturated fatty acids infused in die abornasum (ASF). Fat supplements were provided continuously as emulsions at a rate of 450 g/d. Preplanned contrasts compared CTL to RSO, RSO to RSF, and RSF to ASF. Infusing RSO slightly decreased ruminal pH, but did not affect volatile fatty acids profile and milk fat concentration as compared with CTL. The yields of energy -corrected milk, fat, and protein were greater with RSF compared with RSO. The concentration of odd -chain fatty acids was decreased by RSO, whereas even -chain iso fatty acids were not, affected. Milk fat concentration of 17:0 + cis -9 17:1 was higher for RSF than for RSO, due to the saturated fatty acids supplement containing 2% 17:0 + cis -9 17:1. Limited differences were observed in the milk OBCFA profile between RSF and ASF. A multiple regression analysis yielded the following equation for predicting rumen pH based on milk fatty acids: pII -6.24 -(0.56 x 4:0) + (1.67 x iso 14:0) + (4.22 x iso 15:0) + (9.41 x 22:0). Rumen propionate concentration was negatively correlated with milk fat concentration of iso 14:0 and positively correlated with milk 15:0, whereas the acetate -to -propionate ratio gave the op posite correlations with milk iso 14:0 and 15:0. Milk fat concentration of 17:0 + cis -9 17:1 was not related to rumen propionate or to acetate -to -propionate ratio, due to the presence of 17:0 and cis -9 17:1 in die saturated fatty acids supplement. The results suggest that although lipid supplementation can affect the profile of milk OBCFA, the promise remains of using -these milk fatty acids to evaluate rumen function.

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