Ideal digesta markers used for feeding studies are inert, unabsorbable, and move with the digesta they are intended to mark. Both chromium (III) and cobalt (III) salts of EDTA (CrEDTA and CoEDTA, respectively) are used as markers of liquid digesta in dairy cattle research. A small portion is absorbed and excreted in urine, but the markers are assumed to remain unreactive and as inert salts in the digesta and animal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough lignin has been negatively correlated with neutral-detergent fibre (NDF) digestibility (NDFD) in ruminants and used to predict potential extent of NDF digestion of forages, selection of an analysis, Klason lignin (KL) or acid-detergent lignin (ADL), to describe that the nutritionally relevant lignin has not been resolved. Dismissed as an artifact is the difference between KL and ADL (ΔL). A question is whether ΔL influences NDFD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn ideal digesta marker for use in feeding studies is inert, unabsorbable, and moves with the portion of the digesta it is intended to mark. Both chromium (III) and cobalt (III) salts of EDTA (CrEDTA and CoEDTA, respectively) have been used as digesta liquid markers in studies with dairy cattle. Although a small portion of these markers is known to be absorbed and excreted in urine, the markers are assumed to remain ionically bound in the digesta.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe influence of stage of lactation and corresponding diets on rates of protein degradation (kd) is largely unstudied. Study objectives were to measure and compare in situ ruminal kd of crude protein (CP) and estimate rumen CP escape (rumen-undegradable protein; RUP) of selected feeds by cows at 3 stages of lactation fed corresponding diets, and to determine the incubation times needed in an enzymatic in vitro procedure, using 0.2 units of Streptomyces griseus protease per percent of true CP, that predicted in situ RUP.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNot only feed but also respective bolus particle size could alter diet efficiency and cow performance. The objective of this project was to characterize particle size of selected feeds and respective swallowed boli. Feed samples included 6 different particle length rye grass hay samples, 1 grass silage, 1 corn silage, and 1 total mixed ration (TMR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKeratinocyte growth factor (KGF) protects mice from acute graft-vs-host disease and graft rejection by cytoprotective and yet incompletely understood immunological mechanisms. Recently, we showed that administration of KGF induces selective peripheral expansion of CD4(+)Foxp3(+) regulatory T cells (Treg). In this study, we set out to assess whether the peripheral expansion of Treg accounts for the immunomodulatory effects of KGF after bone marrow (BM) transplantation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKeratinocyte growth factor (KGF) has been shown to reduce the incidence and severity of graft-versus-host disease by prevention of epithelial damage and by modulating alloreactivity. Since regulatory T cells (Treg) play a crucial role in immune modulation, we evaluated the effects of exogenous KGF on peripheral CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg and the generation of Treg in the thymus of normal mice. A 3-day course of KGF induced a rapid selective increase in the number of highly suppressive CD4(+)Foxp3(+) Treg.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLike several other non-human primates, mountain gorillas (Gorilla beringei beringei) in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda consume decaying wood, an interesting but puzzling behaviour. This wood has little obvious nutritional value; it is low in protein and sugar, and high in lignin compared to other foods. We collected pieces of wood eaten and avoided by gorillas, and other foods consumed by gorillas, and measured their sodium content.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRaw milk from 13 cows fed TMR supplemented with native pasture and from 13 cows fed only TMR on one farm was collected separately 4 times with an interval of 15 d between collections. Two blocks (14 kg each) of cheese were made from each milk. The objective was to determine the influence of consumption of native plants in Sicilian pastures on the aroma compounds present in Ragusano cheese.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRagusano is a Protected Denomination of Origin cheese produced in the Hyblean area of Sicily. Sixteen samples of Ragusano cheese from two different treatments [pasture and total mixed ration (TMR)] were evaluated after 4 and 7 mo of aging. The color of the cheeses produced from milk of cows consuming fresh native pasture plants was much more yellow than cheeses from TMR fed cows (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe Cornell Net Carbohydrate and Protein System (CNCPS), a mechanistic model that predicts nutrient requirements and biological values of feeds for cattle, was modified for use with sheep. Published equations were added for predicting the energy and protein requirements of sheep, with a special emphasis on dairy sheep, whose specific needs are not considered by most sheep-feeding systems. The CNCPS for cattle equations that are used to predict the supply of nutrients from each feed were modified to include new solid and liquid ruminal passage rates for sheep, and revised equations were inserted to predict metabolic fecal N.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe immunoregulatory cytokine, interleukin-10 (IL-10), has been shown to inhibit the maturation of human myeloid dendritic cells (DC). In the present study, we demonstrate that IL-10 has paradoxical effects on the maturation of murine myeloid bone marrow-derived DC. On the one hand, IL-10 inhibits the maturation of murine myeloid DC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent technology to numerically expand hemopoietic stem/progenitor cells (HSPC) ex vivo within 1 to 2 weeks is insufficient to warrant significant gain in reconstitution time following their transplantation. In order to more stringently test the parameters affecting HSPC expansion, we followed ex vivo cultures of CD34+-selected umbilical cord blood (UCB) HSPC for up to 10 weeks and investigated the effects of stromal support and cytokine addition. The cytokine combinations included FL + TPO, FL + TPO plus SCF and/or IL6, or SCF + IL6.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn view of the limited potential for rapid hematological recovery after transplantation of umbilical cord blood cells (UCB) in adults, we have attempted to expand CD34+ selected hemopoietic stem cells (HSC) and progenitors in 2-week cultures of whole graft pools in the presence or absence of serum and stromal layers, and with various cytokine combinations including (1) FL + TPO; (2) FL + TPO plus SCF and/or IL6; or (3) SCF + IL6. Both in the input material and cultured grafts we determined the number of colony-forming cells (CFC), cobblestone area forming cells (CAFC), the NOD/SCID repopulating ability (SRA), and CD34+ CD38- subset by phenotyping. The highest fold-increase obtained for the number of nucleated cells (nc), CD34+, CD34+ CD38 cell numbers and CFC content was, respectively, 102 +/- 76, 24 +/- 19, 190 +/- 202 and 53 +/- 37 for stroma-free and 315 +/- 110, 25 +/- 3, 346 +/- 410 and 53 +/- 43 for stroma-supported cultures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe vasopressin/oxytocin-related neuropeptide Lys-conopressin activates two pacemaker currents in central neurons of the mollusk Lymnaea stagnalis. A high-voltage-activated current (I-HVA) is activated at potentials greater than -40 mV and resembles pacemaker currents found in many molluscan neurons. A low-voltage-activated current (I-LVA) activates throughout the range of -90 to 0 mV.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis study was undertaken to investigate research and outreach priorities for Progetto Ibleo (Project Ibleo), a center created in 1990 with tripartite government funding to serve dairy producers in the Hyblean region of Sicily. Data comprised values for production and composition of milk from 1984 to 1989 from 35 herds of Modicana cows on a system based on pasture and that from 69 input-intensive herds of Holstein cows, associated lactation and reproduction measures, and yield and composition of forages from 4 of these farms in 1988. Season had a large effect on the neutral detergent fiber and crude protein composition of forages, production and composition of milk, and predicted yield of fresh Ragusano cheese manufactured from the milk of these cows.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe used chemical composition and in vitro digestibility data from temperate and tropical forages to develop relationships between indices of lignification and forage indigestible NDF. Neutral detergent fiber indigestibility increased nonlinearly as the lignin concentration of the NDF increased. Differences in estimated indigestible NDF using equations developed for a specific forage class (C3 and C4 grasses and legumes) were small and are probably not biologically significant when compared to those estimated from a common equation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe molluscan vasopressin/oxytocin-related neuropeptide conopressin activates two persistent inward currents in neurons from the anterior lobe of the right cerebral ganglion of Lymnaea stagnalis that are involved in the control of male copulatory behavior. The low-voltage-activated (LVA) current is activated at a wide range of membrane potentials, its amplitude being only weakly voltage dependent. The high-voltage-activated (HVA) current is activated at potentials positive to -40 mV only and shows a steep voltage dependence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe molluscan vasopressin/oxytocin analogue Lys-conopressin excites neurons in the anterior lobe of the right cerebral ganglion of the snail Lymnaea stagnalis. Persistent inward currents that underlie the excitatory response were studied with the use of voltage-ramp protocols in the identified neuron RCB1 and other anterior lobe neurons. Under whole cell voltage-clamp conditions, two types of conopressin-activated current could be distinguished on the basis of their voltage dependence: 1) a pacemaker-like current that was activated at potentials above -40 mV (high-voltage-activated current, I(HVA)) and 2) an inward current that was activated at all potentials between -90 and +10 mV (low-voltage-activated current, I(LVA)).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiol Trace Elem Res
February 1997
The effects of selenium (Se) on ruminant microbial fermentation were investigated in vitro using rumen microflora collected from a rumen-fistulated dairy cow. First, the effects of L-selenomethionine (SeMet; at 0.2 or 2 ppm Se) in the presence or absence of wheat bran (WB, 500 mg per incubation flask) were evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA steady-state model of the production, absorption, passage, and concentration of ruminal VFA and pH is developed from published literature data and is structured to use the feed descriptions and inputs from the net carbohydrate and protein system. Included are the effects of pH on growth rate and yield of structural and non-structural carbohydrate-fermenting bacteria; production of acetate, propionate, butyrate, lactate, and methane; conversion of lactate to VFA; ruminal absorption of acids; and prediction of ruminal pH from dietary measures and from ruminal buffering and acidity. The root mean square error of predicted total VFA concentration was 12 mM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFertility and reproductive performance of Landim and Africander females were compared using data collected from 1968 to 1981 at the Chobela Research Station in Mozambique. Breeds were managed together and grouped by age and sex, except when separated for breeding. Traits were relative fertility (probability of fertile females calving from the first breeding season), age at first calving, first calving interval, and subsequent calving intervals.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe growth performance of Landim and Africander breeds was compared using data collected from 1968 to 1981 at the Chobela Research Station in Mozambique. Animals from both breeds were managed together in groups by age and sex, except when separated for breeding. Growth traits were body weights at birth, weaning at 7 mo, 18 mo, and first calving, and pre- and postweaning daily growth rates.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF