Archives Animal Breeding (Jun 2021)

Mitigation of sterigmatocystin exposure in cattle by difructose anhydride III feed supplementation and detection of urinary sterigmatocystin and serum amyloid A concentrations

  • N. Sasazaki,
  • N. Sasazaki,
  • S. Uno,
  • E. Kokushi,
  • K. Toda,
  • H. Hasunuma,
  • D. Matsumoto,
  • A. Miyashita,
  • O. Yamato,
  • H. Okawa,
  • M. Ohtani,
  • J. Fink-Gremmels,
  • M. Taniguchi,
  • M. Takagi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/aab-64-257-2021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 64
pp. 257 – 264

Abstract

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We evaluated the effects of supplementing cattle feed with difructose anhydride III (DFA III) by measuring urinary sterigmatocystin (STC) concentrations using 20 Japanese Black cattle aged 9–10 months from one herd. DFA III was supplemented for 2 weeks for 10 animals, and non-treated animals served as controls. The natural STC concentration in the dietary feed was 0.06 mg kg−1 (mixture of roughage and concentrate) at the beginning of the study (Day 0). The urine STC concentration was measured using liquid chromatography with tandem mass spectrometry 1 d prior to DFA III administration, 9 and 14 d thereafter, and 9 d following supplementation cessation, concomitant with the measurement of serum amyloid A (SAA). The number of heifers in which STC was detected in the urine was low (10 %) in the DFA III group compared to that (60 %) in the control group on Day 9. After 9 d following supplementation cessation (Day 23), STC concentrations were significantly lower (P=0.032) in the DFA III group than in the control group, although there was no difference in the number of heifers in which urinary STC was detected or in SAA concentrations between the two groups. Our findings demonstrate the effect of DFA III on reducing the urinary concentration of STC in Japanese Black cattle.