Journal article

Effects of temperature-humidity index on blood metabolites of German dairy cows and their female calves


Authors listHalli, K.; Cohrs, I.; Bruegemann, K.; Koch, C.; Koenig, S.

Publication year2023

Pages7281-7294

JournalJournal of Dairy Science

Volume number106

Issue number10

ISSN0022-0302

eISSN1525-3198

Open access statusGold

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22890

PublisherElsevier


Abstract
Heat stress (HS) impairs productivity, health, and welfare in dairy cows, and additionally causes metabolic changes. Hence, specific metabolites could be used as HS biomarkers. Consequently, the aim of the present study was to compare blood metabolite concentrations of German Holstein dairy cows and of their female calves suffering from high temperature-humidity index (THI) during late gestation (cows) or during their first week of life (calves) or not. According to the mean daily THI (mTHI) at the day before blood sampling, animals were classified into 2 groups: high mTHI >= 60 (hmTHI) and low mTHI <60 (lmTHI). To perform a standard cross-sectional 2-group study, cow groups (n = 48) and calf groups (n = 47) were compared separately. Differences in metabolite concentrations between hmTHI and lmTHI animals were inferred based on a targeted metabolomics approach. In the first step, processed metabolomics data were evaluated by multivariate data analysis techniques, and were visualized using the web-based platform MetaboAnalyst V5.0. The most important metabolites with pronounced differences between groups were further analyzed in a second step using linear mixed models. We identified 9 thermally sensitive metabolites for the cows [dodecanedioic acid; 3-in-dolepropionic acid; sarcosine; triglycerides (14:0_34:0), (16:0_38:7), (18:0_32:1), and (18:0_36:2); [phosphatidylcholine aa C38:1; and lysophosphatidylcholine a C20:3] and for the calves [phosphatidylcholines aa C38:1, ae C38:3, ae C36:0, and ae C36:2; cholesteryl es-ters (17:1) and (20:3); sphingomyelins C18:0 and C18:1; and p-cresol sulfate], most of them related to lipid me-tabolism. Apart from 2 metabolites (3-indolepropionic acid and sarcosine) in cows, the metabolite plasma concentrations were lower in hmTHI than in lmTHI groups. In our heat-stressed dry cows, results indicate an altered lipid metabolism compared with lactating heat-stressed cows, due to the missing antilipolytic effect of HS. The results also indicate alterations in lipid metabolism of calves due to high mTHI in the first week of life. From a cross-generation perspective, high mTHI directly before calving seems to reduce colostrum quality, with detrimental effects on metabolite concentrations in offspring.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleHalli, K., Cohrs, I., Bruegemann, K., Koch, C. and Koenig, S. (2023) Effects of temperature-humidity index on blood metabolites of German dairy cows and their female calves, Journal of Dairy Science, 106(10), pp. 7281-7294. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22890

APA Citation styleHalli, K., Cohrs, I., Bruegemann, K., Koch, C., & Koenig, S. (2023). Effects of temperature-humidity index on blood metabolites of German dairy cows and their female calves. Journal of Dairy Science. 106(10), 7281-7294. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.2022-22890



Keywords


BETAINEDairy cowsETIOLOGYHEAT-STRESSLYSOPHOSPHATIDYLCHOLINEplasma metabolomeSARCOSINEThermal stress


SDG Areas


Last updated on 2025-10-06 at 11:59