AI Article Synopsis

  • The study assessed the impact of vitamin and mineral supplementation (VTM) and varying rates of weight gain (GAIN) on the development of placental blood vessels and gene expression in crossbred Angus heifers.
  • In Experiment 1, heifers were split into groups based on VTM treatment and weight gain rates, with evaluations showing no significant effects on placental vascularity or angiogenic factors gene expression.
  • Experiment 2 highlighted that while baseline control (CON) heifers had lower cotyledon vascularity, those receiving VTM showed a tendency for greater vascularity, suggesting the importance of continued supplementation during later stages of pregnancy.

Article Abstract

The effect of vitamins and minerals supplementation (VTM) and/or two rates of body weight gain (GAIN) on bovine placental vascular development and angiogenic factors gene expression were evaluated in two experiments: In Exp. 1, crossbred Angus heifers ( = 34) were assigned to VTM/NoVTM treatments at least 71 days before breeding to allow changes in the mineral status. At breeding, through artificial insemination (AI), heifers were assigned to low-gain (LG) 0.28 kg/d or moderate-gain (MG) 0.79 kg/d treatments, resulting in NoVTM-LG (Control; = 8), NoVTM-MG ( = 8), VTM-LG ( = 9), and VTM-MG ( = 9) until day 83 of gestation; In Exp. 2, crossbred angus heifers ( = 28), were assigned to control (CON; = 12), receiving a basal total mixed ration (TMR) or TMR + VTM (VTM; = 16) from breeding until parturition. Placentomes from Exp. 1 and cotyledons (COT) from Exp. 2 were evaluated by immunohistochemistry for COT vascular density area. COTs from Exp. 1 were evaluated for angiogenic factor (-1, -2, 2, 3, 1, , , ) gene expression. In Exp. 1, COT vascularity was not affected by the interaction of VTM and GAIN ( = 0.67) or the main effects of VTM ( = 0.50) and GAIN ( = 0.55). Likewise, angiogenic factors were not differentially expressed between treatments ( < 0.05). In Exp. 2, COT vascularity was greater in VTM vs. CON ( = 0.07). In conclusion, there is a suggested later-stage influence of vitamin and mineral supplementation on placental vascularity, emphasizing the importance of supplementation beyond early pregnancy.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10975159PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/vetsci11030111DOI Listing

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