Biochemical impact of ALAEm supplementation in late gestation on the reproductive performance of sows.

IF 2.6 2区 农林科学 Q1 VETERINARY SCIENCES
Frontiers in Veterinary Science Pub Date : 2025-04-23 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fvets.2025.1548263
Linlu Zhao, Jin Zhang, Jieyi He, Xingbin Ma, Zhichao Yu, Yanhong Yong, Youquan Li, Xianghong Ju, Xiaoxi Liu
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Abstract

Adding plant extracts to diets to enhance sow performance and health is widely regarded as a healthy and sustainable practice. In promoting antibiotic-free farming, plant extracts have emerged as a leading solution for enhancing sow fertility through nutritional strategies. The aim of this study was to investigate the biochemical impacts of supplementation of sows with ALAEm (composed of nine plant extracts) on blood and placental indices of sows in late gestation. The components of ALAEm were determined by UPLC-MS/MS. 196 normal gestation parturient sows were randomly allocated into two groups (n = 98 per group): the control group and the test group fed 20 g/d ALAEm supplementation at 74-114 d of gestation. The study examined the various clinical indexes in the blood, the expression of genes and proteins and metabolomics in the placenta. Dietary ALAEm supplementation improved sow reproductive performance (total number of piglets born alive, number of piglets weaned, wean weight), serum biochemical indices, placental structure and increased gene and protein expression of ZO-1, Claudin-1 and other placental junction-associated factors. ALAEm attenuated placental tissue oxidation, inflammation, and apoptosis, promoted placental growth (EGF and IGF-1) and angiogenesis factors (VEGFA, PIGF and other factors), and increased the nutrient transport in placental (GLUT1 and SNAT2). Dietary ALAEm supplementation decreased the number of metabolites associated with lipid metabolism through alpha-linolenic acid metabolism. Therefore, dietary supplementation of ALAEm in the late gestation may improve fertility by reducing the levels of inflammation, oxidation and apoptosis in placental tissues via the EGFR/VEGFR2-PI3K-AKT1 pathway, promoting placental growth, angiogenesis and nutrient transport, and altering the levels of placental lipid metabolites via α-linolenic acid metabolism.

妊娠后期添加ALAEm对母猪繁殖性能的生化影响。
在日粮中添加植物提取物以提高母猪生产性能和健康被广泛认为是一种健康和可持续的做法。在促进无抗生素农业中,植物提取物已成为通过营养策略提高母猪生育力的主要解决方案。本试验旨在研究饲粮中添加由9种植物提取物组成的ALAEm对妊娠后期母猪血液和胎盘指标的生化影响。采用UPLC-MS/MS法测定ALAEm的成分。选取196头正常妊娠母猪,随机分为两组(n = 98头/组):对照组和试验组在妊娠74 ~ 114 d期间,分别添加20 g/d的ALAEm。该研究检测了血液中的各种临床指标,胎盘中基因和蛋白质的表达以及代谢组学。饲粮中添加ALAEm提高了母猪繁殖性能(活产仔猪总数、断奶仔猪数、断奶仔猪重)、血清生化指标和胎盘结构,提高了ZO-1、Claudin-1等胎盘连接相关因子的基因和蛋白表达。ALAEm减轻胎盘组织氧化、炎症和凋亡,促进胎盘生长(EGF、IGF-1)和血管生成因子(VEGFA、PIGF等因子),增加胎盘营养物质运输(GLUT1、SNAT2)。饲粮中添加ALAEm可通过α -亚麻酸代谢减少与脂质代谢相关的代谢物数量。因此,妊娠后期饲粮中添加ALAEm可能通过EGFR/VEGFR2-PI3K-AKT1通路降低胎盘组织炎症、氧化和凋亡水平,促进胎盘生长、血管生成和营养物质运输,并通过α-亚麻酸代谢改变胎盘脂质代谢物水平,从而提高生育能力。
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来源期刊
Frontiers in Veterinary Science
Frontiers in Veterinary Science Veterinary-General Veterinary
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.40%
发文量
1870
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Veterinary Science is a global, peer-reviewed, Open Access journal that bridges animal and human health, brings a comparative approach to medical and surgical challenges, and advances innovative biotechnology and therapy. Veterinary research today is interdisciplinary, collaborative, and socially relevant, transforming how we understand and investigate animal health and disease. Fundamental research in emerging infectious diseases, predictive genomics, stem cell therapy, and translational modelling is grounded within the integrative social context of public and environmental health, wildlife conservation, novel biomarkers, societal well-being, and cutting-edge clinical practice and specialization. Frontiers in Veterinary Science brings a 21st-century approach—networked, collaborative, and Open Access—to communicate this progress and innovation to both the specialist and to the wider audience of readers in the field. Frontiers in Veterinary Science publishes articles on outstanding discoveries across a wide spectrum of translational, foundational, and clinical research. The journal''s mission is to bring all relevant veterinary sciences together on a single platform with the goal of improving animal and human health.
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