One-carbon metabolite supplementation to nutrient-restricted beef heifers affects placental vascularity during early pregnancy.
J Anim Sci
; 1022024 Jan 03.
Article
em En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-38407272
ABSTRACT
We hypothesized that restricted maternal nutrition and supplementation of one-carbon metabolites (OCM; methionine, folate, choline, and vitamin B12) would affect placental vascular development during early pregnancy. A total of 43 cows were bred, and 32 heifers successfully became pregnant with female calves, leading to the formation of four treatment groups CON - OCM (nâ
=â
8), CONâ
+â
OCM (nâ
=â
7), RES - OCM (nâ
=â
9), and RESâ
+â
OCM (nâ
=â
8). The experimental design was a 2â
×â
2 factorial, with main factors of dietary intake affecting average daily gain control (CON; 0.6 kg/d ADG) and restricted (RES; -0.23 kg/d ADG); and OCM supplementation (+OCM) in which the heifers were supplemented with rumen-protected methionine (7.4 g/d) and choline (44.4 g/d) and received weekly injections of 320 mg of folate and 20 mg of vitamin B12, or received no supplementation (-OCM; corn carrier and saline injections). Heifers were individually fed and randomly assigned to treatment at breeding (day 0). Placentomes were collected on day 63 of gestation (0.225 of gestation). Fluorescent staining with CD31 and CD34 combined with image analysis was used to determine the vascularity of the placenta. Images were analyzed for capillary area density (CAD) and capillary number density (CND). Areas evaluated included fetal placental cotyledon (COT), maternal placental caruncle (CAR), whole placentome (CARâ
+â
COT), intercotyledonary fetal membranes (ICOT, or chorioallantois), intercaruncular endometrium (ICAR), and endometrial glands (EG). Data were analyzed with the GLM procedure of SAS, with heifer as the experimental unit and significance at Pâ
≤â
0.05 and a tendency at Pâ
>â
0.05 and Pâ
<â
0.10. Though no gainâ
×â
OCM interactions existed (Pâ
≥â
0.10), OCM supplementation increased (Pâ
=â
0.01) CAD of EG, whereas nutrient restriction tended (Pâ
<â
0.10) to increase CAD of ICOT and CND of COT. Additionally, there was a gainâ
×â
OCM interaction (Pâ
<â
0.05) for CAD within the placentome and ICAR, such that RES reduced and supplementation of RES with OCM restored CAD. These results indicate that maternal rate of gain and OCM supplementation affected placental vascularization (capillary area and number density), which could affect placental function and thus the efficiency of nutrient transfer to the fetus during early gestation.
In cowcalf production, periods of poor forage availability or quality can result in nutrient restriction during pregnancy. Previous studies have shown that even moderate maternal feed restriction during pregnancy, including very early in pregnancy, has profound effects on fetal and placental development, potentially having lasting impacts on calf growth and body composition later in life. One-carbon metabolites (OCM) in the diet are biomolecules required for methylation reactions and participate in the regulation of gene expression. Our objective was to evaluate the effects of nutrient restriction and OCM supplementation (specifically methionine, choline, folate, and vitamin B12) on placental vascular development during early pregnancy. Proper placental vascular development is necessary for healthy pregnancy outcomes, reflected by normal birth weight and healthy offspring. Our results indicated that maternal rate of gain and OCM supplementation affect placental vascularization, which could affect placental function and thereby fetal development throughout gestation. In the context of beef cattle production, our study sheds light on strategies that could enhance placental vascular development during early pregnancy. However, it is essential to recognize the nuances in our data, highlighting the need for further research to fully comprehend these intricate processes.
Palavras-chave
Texto completo:
1
Coleções:
01-internacional
Base de dados:
MEDLINE
Assunto principal:
Placenta
/
Complexo Ferro-Dextran
Limite:
Animals
/
Pregnancy
Idioma:
En
Revista:
J Anim Sci
Ano de publicação:
2024
Tipo de documento:
Article
País de afiliação:
Estados Unidos
País de publicação:
Estados Unidos