Title: Control of Metabolic Diseases in Dairy Cows
1Control of Metabolic Diseases in Dairy Cows
- Roberto Farina DVM Fatro Group
2High incidence of Metabolic Diseases
Control of Metabolic Diseases is crucially
important for modern dairy herds
- Intensive feeding and management
- Susceptibility of high yielding cows
3- Metabolism
- All the chemical and physical changes that take
place within the body and enable its growth and
functioning
4Regulation of Metabolism
- The coordination of body tissue metabolism
involves two types of regulation - Homeostasis
- Homeorhesis
5Homeostasis - Resistance to change
- Maintenance of physiological equilibrium
- This control operates to maintain constant
conditions within the internal environment - The property of returning to the state a system
was in before it was disturbed
6Homeorhesis - Maintaining the flow
- Coordinated changes in metabolism to adapt to a
new physiological state
- One example of this is the dairy cow transition
period where a series of coordinated changes
occur to support a successful lactation
7The Transition Period
- The last 3 wk before to 3 wk after parturition
(Grummer 1995)
Pregnant Nonlactating
Nonpregnant Lactating
Extreme CHALLENGE
- Most infectious and metabolic diseases in dairy
cows occur during or soon after this time
8Negative Energy Balance (NEB)
Adapted from Bell by Drackley 1999
4 day postpartum
- After parturition extra energy requirement for
milk production is not met by feed energy intake
9DRY MATTER INTAKE (DMI) AROUND CALVING
Bertice 1992
10Glucose demand vs. supply during the
periparturient period
Overton 1998 Douglas 1998
After calving glucose supply is less than demand
by 500 g/d
11Centrality of the Liver
Gluconeogenesis Glycogenesis Glycogenolysis Syn
thesis of Lipoprotein Synthesis
of Cholesterol Synthesis of Phospholipids Deamin
ation of Aminoacids Transamination reactions
Synthesis of Urea Synthesis of Amino
Acids Synthesis of Albumin Synthesis of
Clotting Factors Synthesis of Fibrinolytic
Factors Oxidation of Fatty Acids Ketogenesis Bi
le production Metabolism of Hormones
Metabolism of Vitamins Detoxification of
Xenobiotics Detoxification of Drugs Detoxificati
on of end-metabolism products
Liver is at the crossroads of metabolism
- Its rapid adaptation to support lactation is
central for an uneventful transition
12Hepatic Adaptation to Lactation
Prepartum Postpartum increase
Hepatic Blood Flow 1140 l/h 2099 l/h 84
DMI 9.8 kg/d 14.1 kg/d 44
Liver Oxygen Utilization 1619 mmol/h 3159 mmol/h 95
Liver Metabolic Activity 4.4 mmol O2/g 8.6 mmol O2/g X 2
13The greatest challenges to the liver during the
transition period
High energy requirements
Extensive NEFA Mobilization
Dramatic increase in metabolic activity
14Effective Means to Control Metabolic Diseases in
Dairy Cows
- L-Carnitine and its manifold advantages in
treating metabolic disorders - Peroxisomal Proliferators
- Ways to detoxify ammonia
- Oxidative stress control
15FATTY LIVER
16Fat mobilization syndrome
Vacuoles in hepatocytes of a liver showing
steatosis
- Cows mobilize fatty acids from adipose tissue to
compensate for energy deficit
- TGs accumulate in liver of almost all
high-producing cows during the first few weeks
postpartum - Fatty liver is a common condition (up to
50 of HP dairy cows)
17Lipid Metabolism During the Transition Period
Peroxisomes
Adipose Tissue
TG
Fatty Liver
Stress Hormones
NEFA
NEFA
Liver
TG
CPT
Mitochondria
BETA-OXIDATION
VLDL
CO2
Ketone Bodies
18Serum NEFA concentration around calving
NEFA mM/L
Weeks relative to calving
19Serum NEFA concentration around calving
Underwood 1998
NEFA concentration mEq/L
Days from parturition
20Changes in the concentration of hepatic TGs in
relation to the day of calving
Liver TG - DM basis
Day relative to calving
Vazquez-Anon 1994
21Hepatic lipid accumulation
- Impairs liver function
- Synthesis and biotrasformation of metabolites
- Detoxification and excretion of toxic waste
products and xenobiotics
Detrimental effects on health status, well-being,
productivity and reproductive performance of
dairy cows
22Hepatic lipid accumulation
- Decreased feed intake
- Poor reproductive performance
- Decreased milk production
- Impairment of immunity
23Fatty liver
- Associated with increased metabolic and
infectious diseases - Ketosis
- Displaced abomasum
- Milk fever
- Downer cow syndrome
- Infertility
- Mastitis
- Endometritis
24Effects of NEFA on IgM secretion in PBMC
N. Lacetera 2004
25Effects of NEFA on interferon-? secretion in PBMC
N. Lacetera 2004
26High NEFA and fatty liver are associated with
impairment of the immune system
Mastitis incidence (30 days)
Hepatic fat increment (2 wk after vs. 2 wk before
calving)
Curtis 1989
27Control of hepatic lipidosis
Stimulating peroxisomal ß-oxidation
Peroxisomes
Reducing NEFA mobilization
Adipose Tissue
TG
Fatty Liver
Stress Hormones
NEFA
NEFA
Liver
TG
Boosting VLDL synthesis
CPT
Mitochondria
BETA-OXIDATION
VLDL
Stimulating mitochondrial ß-oxidation
CO2
Ketone Bodies
28Activation of mitochondrial ß-oxidation
- Low rate of synthesis and export of VLDL in
ruminants liver - Oxidation is the most important means of
depleting excess fatty acid from ruminant liver
L-CARNITINE
29Inner Mitochondrial Membrane is Impermeable to FA
Carnitine
Carnitine transports FA inside the mitochondria
where they are burnt to produce energy
(ß-oxidation)
30The Carnitine Shuffle
31Activation of Peroxisomal ß-oxidation
- Pathway to oxidize FA during extensive NEFA
mobilization
- It is induced by dietary fat, starvation,
uncontrolled diabetes, and some compounds
PEROXISOMAL PROLIFERATORS
32HEPAGEN
Active substance
Phenoxy-2-methyl-2 propionic acid
33HEPAGEN
- Hepagen acts by binding PPARa (Peroxisome
Proliferator Activated Receptor alpha) - A nuclear receptor belonging to the PPAR family
- Receptors that play a central role in
coordinating energy balance
34Peroxisome proliferator activated receptors
(PPARs)
- 3 main isotypes
- PPARa, PPARd (or ß), PPAR?
- Transcription factors
- Once activated, PPARs bind to DNA and regulate
gene transcription - The ligands for the PPARs are free fatty acids
and eicosanoids
Genes
Enzymes
MetabolismÂ
35HEPAGEN Mechanism of action
Activated by Hepagen PPARa interacts with RXR and
then , binding to specific response
elements (PPREs), regulates the expression of
target genes involved in the catabolism of fatty
acids
RXR Retinoid X Receptor
36PPARa
- A central regulator of hepatic lipid metabolism
- Control of fatty acid transport and uptake
- Activation of long-chain fatty acid into acyl-CoA
(acyl-CoA synthetase) - Enzymes involved in the ß-oxidation pathway
- Metabolism of lipoproteins
37HEPAGEN
The only specific antisteatotic drug available in
veterinary medicine
- Stimulates peroxisomal and mitochondrial
ß-oxidation - Promotes FA catabolism
- Reduces hepatic synthesis of TGs
- Raises HDL Cholesterol (Important for
steroidogenesis and fertility)
38HEPAGEN
Stimulation of hepatic regenerative capacity
39Ammonia Intoxication
- Boosting liver detoxifying capacity
40Ammonia Intoxication
- Fatty Liver
- Acidosis
- Ketosis
- Intoxications
- Infectious diseases
- Rations low in digestible energy
- High non-protein nitrogen feeding (Urea)
- Excessive or highly degradable protein in the
diet
Decreased liver detoxifying capacity
Gluconeogenesis from aminoacids
41Hepatic triglyceride accumulation reduces
ureagenic capacity up to 40
Strang 1998
42Peripartum Ammonia Intoxication
- Ammonia in peripheral blood doubles when liver
triglyceride concentrations increased during the
postpartum (Zhu 2000) - Early lactation cows also consume more total and
ruminally degradable protein than do prepartum
cows
43Ammonia toxicity
- Affects intermediary metabolism
- Decreases the ability of hepatocytes to
synthesize glucose - Increases the incidence of metabolic disorders
- Reduces milk production
- Affects eggs and embryos and impairs reproductive
performance
44Ammonia strongly inhibits liver capacity to
synthesize glucose
(Overton 1999)
45METABOLASEDetoxifying action on ammonia
- L-Ornithine
- L-Citrulline
- L-Arginine
- Aspartic acid
- Glutamic acid
- L-Carnitine
46Hepatic detoxification of ammonia
AMMONIA
Aspartic acid
Citrulline
UREA CYCLE
Arginine
Ornithine
UREA
Ureogenesis takes place in the liver and is
essential for ammonia detoxification
47Extrahepatic detoxification of ammonia
GLUTAMIC ACID AMMONIA
ASPARTIC ACID AMMONIA
GLUTAMINE
ASPARAGINE
AMMONIA
RENAL SECRETION
48AMMONIA
Ornithine
Citrulline
Aspartic acid
UREA CYCLE
Glutamic acid
Asparagine Glutamine
Arginine
UREA
AMMONIA
URINE
49I.V. Carnitine prevents hyperammoniemia in
ruminants
Changes in plasma ammonia N in sheep following
i.v. L-carnitine administration and oral urea
load test
AMMONIA µmol/L
Control
Carnitine
Time, minutes
Chapa 1998
50Oxydative Stress
51ROS AND FREE RADICALS
Reactive Oxygen Species are intermediate products
in oxidative metabolism
OXIDATIVE STRESS
- Conditions when ROS are generated faster than
they can be safely neutralized by antioxidant
mechanisms
52ROS sources
- Continually produced in cells and removed by the
antioxidant defense systems - Energy production in mitochondria
- Many enzymatic reactions
- Detoxification processes
- Immune response
53ROS Toxicity
- High predisposition to interact with other
molecules - Cause notable damage to cells and tissues
- ROS are deleterious under so-called oxidative
stress conditions - Inflammations, infections
- Environmental stress
- High Producing Dairy Cows
54Oxydative Stress And Metabolic Diseases
- Close correlation between oxidative status and
recovery from metabolic diseases - ROS affects
- Mitochondrial function
- Immune system
- Tissue perfusion
- Enzyme activity
- DNA
- Membrane lipids
55METABOLASEAntioxidant activity
- L-Carnitine
- Lipoic Acid
- Glycine
56Arachidonic acid and oxidative stress
Membrane Phospholipids
- Arachidonic acid plays an important role in
inflammation - Arachidonic acid plays an important role in the
formation of oxygen free radicals via stimulation
of NADPH oxidase System
PL
NADPH Oxidase
PG LT
Oxidative stress
Inflammation
57Carnitine inhibits arachidonic acid turnover and
oxidative stress
Membrane Phospholipids
Carnitine reduces Arachidonic acid availability
(Pignatelli 2003)
PL
AA
CARNITINE
NADPH Oxidase
ß-OXIDATION
PG LT
ß-OXIDATION
Oxidative stress
Inflammation
58LIPOIC or THIOCTIC ACID
Passing from the disulfhydryl to the disulphide
form and vice-versa, it is an efficient
oxidation-reduction system
59LIPOIC/THIOCTIC ACID The Ideal
Antioxidant
- Unique in its ability to act as an antioxidant
both in fat and water - It scavanges most reactive oxygen species
- It is capable of regenerating vitamin C, vitamin
E and glutathione - It has a metal chelating activity
60Glycine
- Glycine, a simple nonessential amino acid, is a
well-known inhibitory neurotransmitter, that acts
via a glycine-gated chloride channel - Also Kupffer cells and other macrophages express
a glycine-gated chloride channel - The inhibitory effect of glycine on these cells
reduces ROS and cytokines production
61(No Transcript)
62The antisteatotic role of Peroxisomal
Proliferators
Specific regulator of Lipid Metabolism Promotes
Fatty acids catabolism Reduces hepatic fatty
infiltration Fights fatty liver and related
metabolic disorders
63When to treat
64Indications
- Preventive treatments in close-up dry cows
- Periparturient disorders (Milk Fever, Ketosis,
Displaced Abomasus, Retained Fetal Membranes,
Mastitis) - Fresh Cow Medicine Programs
65Thank You
- These slides are available on Metabolase website
at www.metabolase.com