Journal of Dairy Science (Jul 2024)

Effect of dietary phosphorus deprivation during the dry period on the liver transcriptome of high-yielding periparturient dairy cows

  • Robert Ringseis,
  • Sophia Wächter,
  • Imke Cohrs,
  • Klaus Eder,
  • Walter Grünberg

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 107, no. 7
pp. 5178 – 5189

Abstract

Read online

ABSTRACT: Although dietary phosphorus (P) deprivation extending from the dry period into early lactation impairs health and productivity of cows, restricting dietary P supply during the dry period not only appears to be innocuous but rather effectively mitigates hypocalcemia during the first wk of lactation. To investigate possible negative metabolic effects of P deprivation during the dry period, the present study tested the hypothesis that restricted dietary P supply during the dry period alters the liver transcriptome of dairy cows during the periparturient period. Thirty late-pregnant multiparous Holstein-Friesian dairy cows entering their second, third, or fourth lactation were assigned to either a dry cow ration with low (LP, 0.16% P in DM) or adequate P content (AP, 0.35% in DM) during the last 4 wk of the dry period (n = 15/group). Liver transcriptomics, which was carried out in a subset of 5 second-parity cows of each group (n = 5), and determination of selected hormones and metabolites in blood of all cows, was performed ∼1 wk before calving and on d 3 postpartum. Liver tissue specimens and blood samples were obtained by a micro-invasive biopsy technique from the right tenth intercostal space and puncture of a jugular vein, respectively. One hundred seventy-five hepatic transcripts were expressed differentially between LP versus AP cows in late pregnancy, and 165 transcripts differed between LP versus AP cows in early lactation (fold change >1.3 and <−1.3, P < 0.05). In late pregnancy, the enriched biological processes of the upregulated and the downregulated transcripts were mainly related to immune processes and signal transduction (P < 0.05), respectively. In early lactation, the enriched biological processes of the upregulated and the downregulated transcripts were involved in mineral transport and biotransformation (P < 0.05), respectively. The plasma concentrations of the hormones and acute-phase proteins (progesterone, insulin-like growth factor 1, serum amyloid α, haptoglobin, and 17β-estradiol) determined were not affected by P supply. These results suggest that P deprivation during the dry period moderately affects the liver transcriptome of cows in late pregnancy and early lactation, and causes no effects on important plasma hormones and acute-phase proteins indicating no obvious impairment of health or metabolism of the cows.

Keywords