AI Article Synopsis

Article Abstract

The intake of isoflavones and the resulting equol contents of both plasma and milk of the same red clover-fed cows are reported for the first time in cyclic change-over design study. Cows were fed four different red clover silages and two timothy-meadow fescue silages as controls. The red clover silages contained daidzein, formononetin, biochanin A and genistein, whereas the timothy-meadow fescue silages contained no isoflavones. We found a strong association (y = 0.071x+2.75, R 2 0.71) between the formononetin intake (x) and equol concentration (y) in the plasma, while the formononetin intake and milk equol concentration were weakly associated (y = 0.0035x+0.358, R 2 0.20). This means that a small part of the total formononetin in the silage is secreted into milk as equol. The mean equol contents in plasma and milk of cows fed red clover silage diets were in the range of 4.6-8.4 mg/l and 458-643 microg/l, respectively, while the respective values for the control diets were in the range of 0.8-1.5 mg/l and 171-287 microg/l. We showed that shorter growing periods of red clover resulted in higher silage formononetin contents and plasma and milk equol contents, suggesting that the equol content of milk can be manipulated by varying the harvesting strategy of red clover. We conclude that milk equol is derived from the formononetin of red clover silage and that milk from red clover-fed cows can be considered as a source of equol in human nutrition.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0007114509990857DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

red clover
28
milk equol
16
equol contents
12
contents plasma
12
plasma milk
12
equol
10
red
9
milk
8
milk red
8
red clover-fed
8

Similar Publications

Genomic selection using white clover multi-year-multi-site data showed predicted genetic gains through integrating among-half-sibling-family phenotypic selection and within-family genomic selection were up to 89% greater than half-sibling-family phenotypic selection alone. Genomic selection, an effective breeding tool used widely in plants and animals for improving low-heritability traits, has only recently been applied to forages. We explored the feasibility of implementing genomic selection in white clover (Trifolium repens L.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The resistance () gene family in plants is a vital component of the plant defense system, enabling host resistance against pathogens through interactions with pathogen effector proteins. These R genes often encode nucleotide-binding (NB-ARC or N) and leucine-rich-repeat (LRR or L) domains, collectively forming the NLR protein family. The NLR proteins have been widely explored in crops from and , but limited studies are available for crops in other families, including .

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Lower atmospheric pressure affects biologically relevant physical parameters such as gas partial pressure and concentration, leading to increased water vapor diffusivity and greater soil water content loss through evapotranspiration. This might impact plant photosynthetic activity, resource allocation, water relations, and growth. However, the direct impact of low air pressure on plant physiology is largely unknown.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Invasive weed species exhibit both advantages, such as the potential for allelochemicals in bioherbicide development, and risks, including their threat to crop production. Therefore, this study aims to identify an allelochemical from , an invasive weed species. The dose-dependent effects of shoot and root extracts (SSE, SRE) on the signaling in the forage crop and germination in various weed species (, , , , and ) were evaluated.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • White clover is susceptible to drought stress, and recent research identified the NAC transcription factor TrNAC002, which plays a key role in regulating plant responses to this stress.
  • Overexpression of TrNAC002 leads to enhanced leaf size, increased lateral root growth, and higher expression of genes related to vegetative growth, allowing plants to better withstand drought conditions.
  • The study shows that modified plants have lower reactive oxygen species levels and higher flavonoid content, which correlates with improved survival under drought conditions compared to wild-type plants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!