Literature DB >> 35750996

Different prenatal supplementation strategies and its impacts on reproductive and nutrigenetics assessments of bulls in finishing phase.

Guilherme Henrique Gebim Polizel1, Rafael Espigolan2, Paulo Fantinato-Neto2, Ricardo de Francisco Strefezzi2, Raissa Braido Rangel3, Cynthia de Carli3, Arícia Christofaro Fernandes3, Evandro Fernando Ferreira Dias3, Roberta Cavalcante Cracco3, Miguel Henrique de Almeida Santana3.   

Abstract

This study investigated the effect of different prenatal nutrition approaches in 126 pregnant Nellore cows on reproductive and nutrigenetic traits of the male offspring during the finishing phase. For that purpose, three nutritional treatments were used in these cows during pregnancy: PP - protein-energy supplementation in the final third, FP - protein-energy supplementation during the entire pregnancy, and NP - (control) only mineral supplementation. The male progeny (63 bulls; 665 ± 28 days of age) were evaluated for scrotal circumference, seminal traits, number of Sertoli cells and testicular area. We performed a genomic association (700 K SNPs) for scrotal circumference at this age. In addition, a functional enrichment was performed in search of significant metabolic pathways (P < 0.05) with inclusion of genes that are expressed in these genomic windows by the MetaCore software. With the exception of major sperm defects (P < 0.1), the other phenotypes showed no difference between prenatal treatments. We found genes and metabolic pathways (P < 0.05) that are associated with genomic windows (genetic variance explained >1%) in different treatments. These molecular findings indicate that there is genotype-environment interaction among the different prenatal treatments and that the FP treatment showed greater major sperm defects compared to the NP treatment.
© 2022. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Beef cattle; Developmental programming; GWAS; Maternal nutrition; Reproduction; SNPs

Year:  2022        PMID: 35750996     DOI: 10.1007/s11259-022-09963-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Vet Res Commun        ISSN: 0165-7380            Impact factor:   2.459


  53 in total

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Review 5.  Obesity and cortisol.

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8.  Inflammatory response in visceral fat tissue and liver is prenatally programmed: experimental research.

Authors:  L Bezpalko; O Gavrilyuk; O Zayachkivska
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Authors:  D J P Barker; J G Eriksson; T Forsén; C Osmond
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