Dietary and Ruminally Derived trans-18:1 Fatty Acids Alter Bovine Milk Lipids
- 1 April 1994
- journal article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 124 (4) , 556-565
- https://doi.org/10.1093/jn/124.4.556
Abstract
The objectives of this study were to determine whether dietary fish oil enhances production of trans-18:1 isomers in the bovine rumen and whether flow of ruminally derived and/or dietary trans-18:1 to the small intestine is correlated with milk fat production. Four lactating Holstein cows with cannulas in the rumen and proximal duodenum were fed diets with 0% supplemental fat (control diet), 3% hydrogenated tallow fatty acids (HTFA diet), 1.5% menhaden oil plus 1.5% stearic acid (MO+SA diet), or 1.5% soybean oil plus 1.5% partially hydrogenated soybean oil (SBO+HSBO diet) in a 4 x 4 Latin square design. Intakes of trans-18:1 were 0, 12, 0 and 69 g/d when cows were fed the control, HTFA, MO+SA and SBO+HSBO diets, respectively. However, the extent of 18:1 + 18:2(n-6) + 18: 3(n-3) biohydrogenation in the rumen was reduced by consumption of the MO+SA and SBO+HSBO diets. As a result, flow of trans-18:1 to the duodenum was 163 g/d for MO+SA-fed cows and 152 g/d for SBO+HSBO-fed cows compared with 38 g/d for cows fed the HTFA and control diets. Incomplete biohydrogenation accounted for all of the trans-18:1 flow when the MO+SA diet was fed. Compared with results when the HTFA and control diets were fed, milk fat percentage was lower and concentration of trans-18:1 in milk fat was higher when the MO+SA and SBO+HSBO diets were fed. Across all treatments, milk fat percentage decreased linearly with the amount of trans-18:1 flowing to the duodenum and the concentration of trans-18:1 in milk fat. Results indicate that bovine milk fat percentage is depressed by trans-18:1, whether derived from the diet or from incomplete biohydrogenation of unsaturated fatty acids.This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Incorporation of n−3 fatty acids of fish oil into tissue and serum lipids of ruminantsLipids, 1992
- Hydrogenated oil decreases tissue concentrations of n‐6 polyunsaturated fatty acids and may contribute to dyschondroplasia in broilersBritish Poultry Science, 1991
- Milk Fat Depression in C57Bl/6J Mice Consuming Partially Hydrogenated FatJournal of Nutrition, 1990
- Influences of biotin deficiency and dietary trans-fatty acids on tissue lipids in chickensBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1989
- Investigation of chromium, cerium and cobalt as markers in digesta. Rate of passage studiesJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1980
- Lipids of human milk and infant formulas: a reviewThe American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 1978
- Direct methylation of long‐chain fatty acids in feeds, digesta and faeces without prior extractionJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1976
- Quantitative aspects of fatty acid biohydrogenation, absorption and transfer into milk fat in the lactating goat, with special reference to the cis- and trans-isomers of octadecenoate and linoleateBiochemical Journal, 1972
- Metabolism of cod-liver oil in relation to milk fat secretionJournal of Dairy Research, 1972
- Fatty acid specificity of glyceride synthesis by homogenates of bovine mammary tissueLipids, 1971