Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population

ABSTRACT: The Simmental breed is widely known for its resilience, robustness, and resistance to disease, and the incidence of ketosis in this breed is therefore generally lower compared with Holsteins. Blood concentrations of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), BHB, and urea provide valuable informati...

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Main Authors: S. Magro, A. Costa, A. Cesarani, L. Degano, M. De Marchi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-02-01
Series:Journal of Dairy Science
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030224012906
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author S. Magro
A. Costa
A. Cesarani
L. Degano
M. De Marchi
author_facet S. Magro
A. Costa
A. Cesarani
L. Degano
M. De Marchi
author_sort S. Magro
collection DOAJ
description ABSTRACT: The Simmental breed is widely known for its resilience, robustness, and resistance to disease, and the incidence of ketosis in this breed is therefore generally lower compared with Holsteins. Blood concentrations of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), BHB, and urea provide valuable information about the metabolic, health, and nutritional status of lactating animals. In the present study, we estimated h2 of BHB, NEFA, and urea in blood predicted from milk mid-infrared spectra and assessed their genetic correlation with milk yield and composition traits in the Italian Simmental cattle breed using phenotypes of 3,549 cows in 207 herds. Two sets were considered: early (1,920 records, 1 per cow, between 5 and 35 DIM) and whole (14,378 records, at least 3 per cow, between 5 and 305 DIM) lactation. In early lactation, h2 estimates were 0.06 for blood BHB as-is, 0.06 for log-transformed BHB, 0.18 for NEFA, 0.14 for log-transformed NEFA, and 0.05 for blood urea. In the whole lactation, the h2 were 0.09 for blood BHB as-is, 0.16 for log-transformed BHB, 0.03 for NEFA, 0.04 for log-transformed NEFA, and 0.04 for blood urea. As far as the genetic correlations were concerned, blood BHB was positively correlated with NEFA and blood urea. Blood BHB and NEFA were generally positively correlated with milk fat-to-protein ratio and milk, but only the first was negatively correlated with lactose content and positively with SCS. Sires' EBVs for BHB with accuracy ≥0.60 were extrapolated for a posteriori evaluation of the daughters' observed performance. The progeny of the top 5% of sires exhibited, on average, lower blood BHB, NEFA, and urea compared with the daughters of the bottom 5%. Overall, it is highly recommended to monitor the genetic variability of the metabolic traits in the dual-purpose Italian Simmental breed to monitor the incidence of metabolic diseases in future generations.
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spelling doaj-art-bcb2bf5133464a1a8d1a709acdc6d8312025-01-23T05:25:16ZengElsevierJournal of Dairy Science0022-03022025-02-01108217781789Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle populationS. Magro0A. Costa1A. Cesarani2L. Degano3M. De Marchi4Department of Agronomy, Food, Natural resources, Animals and Environment, University of Padova, 35020 Legnaro, ItalyDepartment of Veterinary Medical Sciences, Alma Mater Studiorum University of Bologna, 40064 Ozzano dell'Emilia, ItalyDepartment of Agricultural Sciences, University of Sassari, 07100 Sassari, Italy; Department of Animal and Dairy Science, University of Georgia, Athens, GA 30602; Corresponding authorAssociazione Nazionale Allevatori Bovini di Razza Pezzata Rossa Italiana (ANAPRI), 33100 Udine, ItalyDepartment of Agronomy, Food, Natural resources, Animals and Environment, University of Padova, 35020 Legnaro, ItalyABSTRACT: The Simmental breed is widely known for its resilience, robustness, and resistance to disease, and the incidence of ketosis in this breed is therefore generally lower compared with Holsteins. Blood concentrations of nonesterified fatty acids (NEFA), BHB, and urea provide valuable information about the metabolic, health, and nutritional status of lactating animals. In the present study, we estimated h2 of BHB, NEFA, and urea in blood predicted from milk mid-infrared spectra and assessed their genetic correlation with milk yield and composition traits in the Italian Simmental cattle breed using phenotypes of 3,549 cows in 207 herds. Two sets were considered: early (1,920 records, 1 per cow, between 5 and 35 DIM) and whole (14,378 records, at least 3 per cow, between 5 and 305 DIM) lactation. In early lactation, h2 estimates were 0.06 for blood BHB as-is, 0.06 for log-transformed BHB, 0.18 for NEFA, 0.14 for log-transformed NEFA, and 0.05 for blood urea. In the whole lactation, the h2 were 0.09 for blood BHB as-is, 0.16 for log-transformed BHB, 0.03 for NEFA, 0.04 for log-transformed NEFA, and 0.04 for blood urea. As far as the genetic correlations were concerned, blood BHB was positively correlated with NEFA and blood urea. Blood BHB and NEFA were generally positively correlated with milk fat-to-protein ratio and milk, but only the first was negatively correlated with lactose content and positively with SCS. Sires' EBVs for BHB with accuracy ≥0.60 were extrapolated for a posteriori evaluation of the daughters' observed performance. The progeny of the top 5% of sires exhibited, on average, lower blood BHB, NEFA, and urea compared with the daughters of the bottom 5%. Overall, it is highly recommended to monitor the genetic variability of the metabolic traits in the dual-purpose Italian Simmental breed to monitor the incidence of metabolic diseases in future generations.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030224012906ketosisheritabilitymetabolic disordertransition cow
spellingShingle S. Magro
A. Costa
A. Cesarani
L. Degano
M. De Marchi
Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population
Journal of Dairy Science
ketosis
heritability
metabolic disorder
transition cow
title Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population
title_full Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population
title_fullStr Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population
title_full_unstemmed Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population
title_short Genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the Italian Simmental cattle population
title_sort genetic aspects of major blood metabolites in the italian simmental cattle population
topic ketosis
heritability
metabolic disorder
transition cow
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0022030224012906
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