- 著者一覧
- Asato Yuuki
Asato Yuuki
Affiliate Master
Yamaguchi University
Id (<span class="translation_missing" title="translation missing: en.view.desc">Desc</span>)
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
Creators :
Niyonzima Yvan Bienvenu
Asato Yuuki
Murakami Tomoaki
Kadokawa Hiroya
Publishers : CSIRO Publishing
Reproduction, Fertility and Development
published_at 2023-07-19
Context: Ethanolamine plasmalogens (EPls) and choline plasmalogens (CPls) are classes of ethanolamine ether phospholipids (ePE) or choline ether phospholipids (ePC), respectively. EPls play crucial roles in maternal and breastfed infant bodies and stimulate gonadotropin secretion by gonadotrophs.
Aims: To estimate changes in and importance of plasma concentrations of EPls and CPls, utilizing newly developed enzymatic fluorometric assays for ePE and ePC in postpartum Holstein cows.
Methods: Plasma samples were collected 3 weeks before expected parturition until approximately 8 weeks after parturition (16 primiparous and 38 multiparous cows) for analysis.
Key results: Plasma concentrations of ePE and ePC, most of which are plasmalogens, declined before and increased after parturition and stabilised near the day of the first postpartum ovulation (1stOV). From weeks 2 to 3 after parturition, third-parity cows exhibited ePE concentrations that were higher than those of other parity cows. The days from parturition to 1stOV correlated with days from parturition to conception. On the day of 1stOV, milk yield correlated with plasma concentration of both ePE and ePC, while ePC concentration correlated negatively with milk fat percentage. At the early luteal phase after 1stOV, plasma ePE concentration correlated with plasma anti-Müllerian hormone concentration (r = 0.39, P < 0.01), and plasma ePC concentration correlated with plasma follicle-stimulating hormone concentration (r = 0.43, P < 0.01).
Conclusion: The concentrations of ePE and ePC changed dramatically around parturition and 1stOV, and then the concentrations correlated with the important parameters.
Implications: The blood plasmalogen may play important roles in postpartum dairy cows.
Creators :
Saito Risa
Kubo Tomoaki
Wakatsuki Takuji
Asato Yuuki
Tanigawa Tamako
Kotaniguchi Miyako
Hashimoto Maki
Kitamura Shinichi
Kadokawa Hiroya
Publishers : CSIRO Publishing