Title: Fats in ruminant diets
1Fats in ruminant diets
- Diets are low
- Ruminants evolved as herbivores
- Forages are typically 1-4 lipid (stems leaves)
- Corn 4
- Added fat should limited to 3 4 (DM basis)
- Do not exceed 6 7 of total diet (DM basis)
2Feeds
- Types of fat supplements
- Unprotected oils
- Vegetable oils
- Highly unsaturated
- Expensive
- Most adverse affects
- Animal fats (tallow, grease etc.)
- Most commonly added to beef and dairy diets
- More saturated
- Less adverse affects
- Difficult to mix in cold weather
3Feeds
- Whole oil seeds
- Higher proportion escapes ruminal metabolism
- Less adverse effects than free oils
- Easy to use
- Cost effectiveness
- Solvent extracted, expeller pressed
4Feeds
- Examples
- Soybeans 17-19 (meal 1-3)
- Flax/Linseed 40-45 (meal 2-4)
- Canola/rapeseed 40-45 (meal 3-5)
- Sunflower 30-45 (meal 0.5-1.5)
- Cottonseed 17-18 (meal 2-3)
5Feeds
- High oil feeds
- Distillers grains 8-11
- Brewers grains 10-11
- High oil corn (7 8)
- Fish meal (10 11)
6Feeds
- Ruminally inert fats
- Escapes ruminal digestion
- Less adverse than free oils
- Will reduce feed intake
- Types
- Ca salts of long chain fatty acids - Megalac
- Prilled (saturated fat processed in small
spheres) - Expensive
7Feeding fat to ruminants
- Why feed fats to ruminants?
- Increase energy density (growth, reproduction)
- Carbohydrate 4.0 kcal/g
- Protein 3.2 kcal/g
- Fat 9.0 kcal/g little fermentative loss
- Can increase dietary energy without decreasing
forage level - Can reduce acidosis effects
- Forage needed to minimize fat effects on milk fat
percentage - Also need to mainain NFC level (30 40)
8- Fats increase energy without increasing heat
increment - Change nutrient profile of products
- Increased milk fat
- Fatty acid content
- Health benefits (CLA, unsaturated fats)
- Decrease dustiness
9- Improved reproduction
- Improved conception rate
- Increased energy balance
- Increase follicle size and number
- Decreased insulin and increased progesterone
- Increase persistence of corpus luteum
- Decresased prostaglandin F 2 alpha
- Depends
- Inadequate energy to begin with
- Decrease methane production?
- Growth modification?
10- Why dont we supplement?
- Interferes with rumen fermentation
- Physically coats fiber
- Toxic effect on microbes
- Decreased cation availability
11Inhibitory effects on rumen fermentation
- Inhibit gram- bacteria and protozoa
- methanogenic and cellulolytic bacteria
- Decreases fiber digestion
- Addition of 10 lipid decreased by up to 50
(Jenkins and palmquist (1984) - Decreases VFA production (energy source for
animal) - More of a concern in high forage diets (dairy)
- FFA TAG
- SCFA LCFA (SCFA are more soluble)
- Unsaturated saturated (UFA more soluble)
12Feeding fat to ruminants
- Decreased feed intake
- Decreased fiber digestion
- Decreased gut motility
- Decreased palatability
- Oxidation of fat in liver exceeds capacity
- Milk fat depression
- Decreased fiber digestion
- Production of trans fatty acids
13- Decreased mineral digestion
- Formation of soaps with Ca and Mg
- Decrease in milk protein in dairy cows
- Milk protein, 101.1 0.6381x 0.0141x2
- Where x total dietary fat
- Caused more by increase milk production rather
than a decrease in protein synthesis - Effects arent consistent
14- Fats are
- Nutritive (energy source)
- Fatty acids, triglycerides, galactolipids,
phospholipds - Nonnutritive (less nutritive)
- Waxes, pigments (chlorophyll, carotenoids,
xanthophylls, saponins), sterols - Forages as high as 50 is nonnutritive
- Cereal grains
15Forms of dietary lipid
- Cereal grain Triacylglycerol (TAG)
16 17- Phospholipid
- Structural, found in forages and grains
- Ethanolamine, choline, serine, inositol
18- How do we measure dietary fat
- Ether extract historically
- Fatty acid content of ether extract
- Forages
- Grains 65 80
- Oilseeds 90
- Remaining
- Nutritive glycerol, galactose (fermented)
- Low utilization some waxes (25 30 carbon)
- Very low utilization carotenoids
- Indigestible waxes ( 30 carbon), chlorphyll
(some bacterial degradation) - Gas chromatography to measure feed lipids
19Fatty acid classification
- Chain length (C1 C30)
- Volatile fatty acids (VFA C1 C6)
- Found free in fermented feeds
- Short chain fatty acids (SCFA C1 C8)
- Medium chain (MCFA C10 C14)
- Long chain (LCFA C16 and )
- Linkages
- Free fatty acid (FFA), non-esterified fatty acids
(NEFA) - Esterified attached to glycerol backbone
20- Hydrogenation
- Saturated (C180)
- Mono-unsaturated (C181)
- Poly-unsaturated (C182, C183)
21- Optical isomers (1 or more double bonds)
trans-10, cis-12 182
cis-9, trans-11 182
Most ruminant dietary fats are in the cis form
22Essential fatty acids
- Omega-3 (?-3, n-3)
- Eicosapentaenoic (EPA, 205)
- Docosahexaenoic (DHA, 226)
- Omega-6 (?-6, n-6)
- Arachidonic acid (AA, 204)
- Required for
- Prostaglandin synthesis
- Phospholipid synthesis, cell membranes
- Animals are unable to synthesize
23Essential fatty acids
- Acquired through chain elongation and
desaturation - Linoleic (C182)
- Linolenic acid (C183)
- Ruminants vs non-ruminants
- Born with very low PUFA reserve
- Requirement is much lower
24Church, Table 15-2 Palmquist and Jenkins, 1980
25Ruminant lipid metabolism
- Hydrolysis
- Galactolipid ? galactose DAG
- DAG, TAG ? FFA glycerol
- Esterified FA ? NEFA
- Galactose, glycerol ? VFA
- VFA ? Absorbed
- Saturated FA
- Form carboxylate salts
- pass to small intestine
- Unsaturated FA
- Biohydrogenation
- Form carboxylate salts pass to small intestine
26- Hydrolysis
- Most bacteria
- Some protozoa
- Rapid, but rate limiting
- Prevent build-up of unsaturated fats
- Plant oils (90 ) fish oil (50 )
27- Biohydrogenation
- Occurs on feed particles
- Add H to double bonds
- Hydrogen sink
- detoxification
- C183 ? C182 ? C181 ? C180
- Trans configurations result
28(No Transcript)
29- Distribution of lipid in the rumen
- of total lipid (wet digesta)
- Bacteria 4.1
- Protozoa 15.6
- Feed particles in rumen fluid 80.3
30linoleic cis-9, cis-12 C182
Isomerase
CLA trans-10, cis-12 C182
CLA cis-9, trans-11 C182
Hydrogenase
Vaccenic Acid trans-11 C181
Vaccenic Acid trans-10 C181
Hydrogenase
Stearic acid C180
31a-linolenic cis-9, cis-12, cis-15 C183
Isomerase
trans-10, cis-12, cis-15 C183
cis-9, trans-11, cis-15 C183
Hydrogenase
trans-10, cis-15 C182
trans-11, cis-15 C182
Hydrogenase
Vaccenic Acid trans-10 C181
Vaccenic Acid trans-11 C181
Hydrogenase
Stearic acid C180
32From Wallace, 2008
33- Non-ruminants
- Depot fat reflects dietary fat
- Ruminants
- Depot fat is more saturated
- Contains more trans configurations
- Tallow vs. lard
- Distillers grains
34Fatty acid composition of beef and milk
Van Soest, 1994
35Protected fat
- Carboxylate salts (soap)
- Ca, Mg
- Insoluble
- Escape biohydrogenation
- More favorable for saturated fatty acids
- Dissociate at low pH
- Saturated pKa 4.5
- Unsaturated pKa 5.5
36- Carboxylate salts
- Would they work in high grain diets?
37Protected fats
- Pre-formed carboxylate salts (soaps)
- Used in dairy rations, not beef
- Increases energy density of the diet without
affecting fiber digestion
38CLA
- Only produced by ruminants rumenic acid
- Conjugated 2 double bonds separated by 1 single
bond - trans-11 C181
- Can be converted back to cis-9, trans-11 CLA
- ?9-desaturase mammary gland
- trans-10 C181
- Cannot be converted back to trans-10, cis-12 CLA
in mammary gland - cis-9, trans-11 CLA 10 20-fold higher vs
trans-10, cis-12 CLA
39CLA
- Anticarcinogenic
- Antiatherogenic
- Antiobesity
- Grass fed
- Can double or triple cis-9, trans-11 CLA
- Fat content
- Grain-fed 3-5
- Grasss-fed 1-3
40CLA
41Milk fat depression
- Inhibitory
- Trans-10, cis-12
- Cis-10, trans-12
- Trans-9, cis-11
- Non-inhibitory
- Cis-9, trans-11
- Mechanism?
- Inhibits Sterol Regulatory Element Binding
Protein (SREBP) - Lipogenic transcription factor
42Effect of 182 isomers on SC adipocyte growth in
vitro
Differentiation medium
Zhou et al., 2007
Decreased cell size
43Dietary CLA and marbling
- Swine 2 CLA-mix fed for 45 days (Meadus et al.,
2002)
- Sheep (70 d) no change NS dose effect (Wynn et
al., 2006) - Beef (final 30 60 d) no change (Gillis et al.,
2004) corn oil
44Rumen synthesis of lipids
- Non-ruminant fat even chain
- Acetyl-CoA attached
- Ruminants
- Even chain ? 160, 180
- odd chain and methyl branched chain fatty acids
- Cattle 1-2
- Up to 15 in sheep and goats
- VFA produced
- Propionic (30) and valeric (50) ? odd chain
- Iso-acids (iso-butyric, iso-valeric) ? BCFA
- Trans configuration
- High dietary fat will inhibit microbial synthesis
of lipid
45Intestinal digestion of lipids
- No significant absorption of lipid in omassum or
abomassum - Lipid arriving in duodenum is often higher than
dietary lipid - Approximately 20 lipid disappearance in rumen
- Contribution of microbial synthesis
- Greater in high forage diets
46Intestinal digestion of lipids
- Fatty acids are in free form (80 90)
- Fatty acid soaps from rumen are now free (pH)
- Attached to feed particles
- Remaining are microbial PL, small amounts of TAG,
glycolipid - Non-ruminants TAG, DAG, MAG
47Intestinal digestion of lipids
- Fat absorption occurs in jejunum
- Non-ruminants
- MAG are required for micelle formation
- pH 6-7
- Bile salts can form an emulsion
48Intestinal digestion of lipids
- Ruminants
- Fatty acids are in free form (microbial
hydrolysis) - Attached to feed particles decreased solubility
- pH is 2-3
- Pancreatic secretions low in bicarbonate
- Fatty acids are protonated at this pH
- pKa of fatty acids 4.5 (saturated), 5.5
(unsaturated) - Low for most of the proximal half of small
intestine - Limited pancreatic lipase activity because of low
pH - Pancreatic lipase converts TAG to MAG
- Non-ruminants
- Phospholipase A2 active at low pH
- Converts phospholipid and lecithin to
lysolecithin - Lecithin secreted in bile
49- Ruminants
- Must be transferred to micelle
- Desorb from feed particle
- Bile salt
- Non-ruminant glycocholic (pK 3.7)
- Ruminant taurocholic (pK 1.5)
- Increase solubility (form micelle)
- Lysolecithin (lysophosphatidylcholine)
- Secreted as lecithin (bile)
- Converted to lysolecithin by phospholipase A2
50- Lysolecithin
- High in 181
- Way for ruminant to preserve 181 essential
fatty acid - 181 is preferentially absorbed and esterfied as
phospholipid - Phospholipid
- Only 20 of total esterified fatty acid
- Carries over 50 of 181
Lysolecithin
51Intestinal digestion of lipids
- Lysolecithin bile salts
- Desorb fatty acids from feed
- Allows formation of micelles
- Micelles taken up by epithelial cells
- Re-esterified and packaged into chylomicrons
52Intestinal digestion of lipids
53- 20 absorbed in upper jejunum
- 60 in the remainder of jejunum
- Nearly complete by ileum
- Acidic environment
- Non-ruminants neutral environment
54(No Transcript)
55- Unsaturated fatty acids
- Lower digestion vs non-ruminants
- Saturated fatty acids
- More complete digestion vs non-ruminants
- Non-ruminants digestibility decreases as chain
length increases - Ruminants digestibility not decreased as much
56Resynthesis and transport of lipids
- Enterocyte
- Fatty acids absorbed
- C14 - lymph
- Chylomicrons, VLDL synthesized
57- Chylomicrons, VLDL synthesis
- Fatty acids re-esterified to TAG, DAG, MAG
- Non-ruminants 2-monoglyceride pathway
- Ruminants alpha glycerophosphate pathway
- little or no monoglyceride present
- 2-monoglyceride pathway present, but used little
- Inert fat
- Glucose used as glycerol source
- Essential FA are conserved through preferential
esterification as phospholipid - TAG are packaged with phospohlipid, cholesterol,
apoproteins
58- Ruminants VLDL predominates
- Non-ruminants chylomicrons predominate
- Why?
- Phospholipids, cholesterol, apoprotein synthesis
is slow - Ruminants lipid digestion
- continuous, slow
- Phospholipids, cholesterol, apoproteins readily
available - Fatty acids are more saturated favors VLDL
- Non-ruminants lipid digestion
- meal oriented, rapid
- Phospholipids, cholesterol, apoproteins not
readily available - Fatty acids are more unsaturated favors
chylomicrons
59- Ruminant chylomicrons
- Favored if high unsaturated FA reach small
intestine - Smaller than non-ruminants
- Nonruminants 1000 5000 nm
- Ruminants 75 1000 nm
- VLDL 25 75 nm
- Contains 2x more phospholipid than nonruminants
- Freeesterified cholesterol ratio is 41 compared
to 11 for nonruminants
60Lipid transport in blood
- Ruminant VLDL and chylomicrons
- Contain apoprotein-C
- Inhibits liver removal
- Activates lipoprotein lipase at muscle, adipose,
and mammary tissue - Very short-lived
- 70 of lipids are HDL
- 20 of lipids are LDL
61Liver synthesis of lipoproteins
- Little fatty acid synthesis
- Lipoproteins from intestinal mucosa are not
utilized by liver - Dependent on NEFA and glycerol (from glucose)
concentration in circulation - If glucose is limiting glycerol synthesis and
fatty acid oxidation, the NEFAs are oxidized to
ketones - Synthesized TAG are incorporated into VLDL
62Ketosis
- High producing dairy cows
- Lactose in milk derived from glucose
- Lactose concentration needs to be maintained
- Glucose production cant keep up
- Increased fat mobilization (low blood glucose)
- Decreased milk production
- Ketone bodies
- Beta hydroxybutyrate
- Acetoacetate (blood, urine analysis good
marker) - Acetone (minor)
- Acetate is not ketogenic, butyrate is
63Ketone Bodies
AcAc
BHBA
Acetone
VFAs
Butyrate
Acetate
64- Sequence
- Reduced glucose (and insulin)
- Increased lipid mobilization
- Elevated blood NEFA
- Elevated ketones
- Fatty liver
65(No Transcript)
66Fatty Liver
- Capacity for liver to produce ketones is exceeded
- Early ketosis - 7.4
- Late stage of ketosis 20
67Fat cow syndrome
- Cows overfed during dry period and carry too much
condition into calving - Feed intake is low at calving
- Excessive fat mobilization
- Similar to ketosis
- Ketones and NEFA are high
- Glucose may or may not be high