| Literature DB >> 21103072 |
Michael V Dodson1, Gary J Hausman, Leluo Guan, Min Du, Theodore P Rasmussen, Sylvia P Poulos, Priya Mir, Werner G Bergen, Melinda E Fernyhough, Douglas C McFarland, Robert P Rhoads, Beatrice Soret, James M Reecy, Sandra G Velleman, Zhihua Jiang.
Abstract
Meat animals are unique as experimental models for both lipid metabolism and adipocyte studies because of their direct economic value for animal production. This paper discusses the principles that regulate adipogenesis in major meat animals (beef cattle, dairy cattle, and pigs), the definition of adipose depot-specific regulation of lipid metabolism or adipogenesis, and introduces the potential value of these animals as models for metabolic research including mammary biology and the ontogeny of fatty livers.Entities:
Keywords: Meat animals; adipocytes; adipogenesis; adipose depots; lipid metabolism
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 21103072 PMCID: PMC2990072 DOI: 10.7150/ijbs.6.691
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Biol Sci ISSN: 1449-2288 Impact factor: 6.580
Major difference in lipid metabolism between ruminant and non-ruminant animals.
| Non-ruminants | Ruminants | |
|---|---|---|
| Fatty acid absorption | Fatty acids are absorbed directly in small intestine and proceed into the blood | Fatty acids are fermented into volatile fatty acids in rumen, which are absorbed. |
| Principal site of fatty acid de novo synthesis | Liver (humans; rodents) Adipose (pigs) | Adipose tissue, as well as mammary gland for lactating ruminants |
| Precursor for fatty acid de novo synthesis | Glucose | Acetate |
| Fatty acids in circulation | Very low density lipoproteins and chylomicrons | Volatile fatty acids and low density lipoproteins |
| Fatty acid composition | Long chain fatty acids with a sizeable proportion of unsaturated fatty acids | High proportion of short chain saturated fatty acids |
Figure 1Comparison of identified QTL associated with SAT (A), Marb (B), and KPH (C). The red vertical lines next to each chromosome denote the location of each QTL. The results shown here are intended as a demonstration and are not intended to be comprehensive for the bovine genome.
Functional genes associated with subcutaneous (SAT), internal (KPH) or intramuscular adipose tissue (Marb) depots discovered in a Wagyu x Limousin reference population 49*.
| Symbol | Description | SFD | KPH | BMS |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ABCA1 APOE BAK1 | ATP binding cassette A1 Apolipoprotein E BCL2-antagonist/killer 1 | A D A | ||
| CAPN1 | Calpain 1 | A | ||
| CRHR1 | Corticotropin releasing hormone receptor 1 | A | ||
| CRP | C-reactive protein, pentraxin-related | D | D | |
| DHCR7 | 7-dehydrocholesterol reductase | O | ||
| FABP4 | Fatty acid binding protein 4 | O | ||
| PAPD1 | Poly (A) polymerase associated domain containing 1 | O | ||
| RCAN1 | Regulator of calcineurin 1 | D | A | |
| PON1 SKIV2L | Paraoxidase I Superkiller viralicidic activity 2-like (S. cerevisiae) | A | D | |
| SLC27A2 | Solute carrier family 27, member 2 | A | D | |
| TFAM | Transcription factor A, mitochondrial | A | ||
| TFBM1 | Transcription factor B1, mitochondrial | A | ||
| UCN3 | Urocortin 3 | O |
*Only significant associations (P<0.05) were presented for each gene with additive (A), dominant (D) and overdominant (O) effects.
Figure 2Genetic networks for SFD (A), KPH (B) and BMS (C) by the linear regression analysis for all significant single gene-trait associations. The numbers in arrows represent substitution effects of one type of genotypes or allele for another one. Each combined genotype(s) among different genes has two means of performance: predicted (top or left side) and actual (bottom or right side). “-“ indicates that no animals were identified with the combined genotype(s) in the population 49.