The objective of the experiment was to determine the contribution of red blood cells to transport of individual amino acids to lactating bovine mammary glands. Blood samples were collected from coccygeal and subcutaneous abdominal veins of 21 lactating Holstein cows on d 35, 70, 105, and 126 of lactation. Samples were collected every 20 min for 12 h. Subsamples of whole blood and plasma were pooled by hour and day. Hourly plasma samples and daily whole blood and plasma samples were analyzed for amino acid concentration. Plasma glutamate concentration was stable throughout the 12-h collection period, indicating that sample collection did not perturb amino acid homeostasis. Therefore, data from pooled daily samples were used for subsequent comparisons. Whole blood arteriovenous differences of phosphoserine, aspartate, glutamate, hydroxyproline, phosphoethanolamine, serine, asparagine, glycine, glutamine, taurine, histidine, citrulline, threonine, alanine, β-aminoisobutyrate, carnosine, arginine, proline, α-aminobutyrate, tyrosine, valine, methionine, cystine, isoleucine, leucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan, ornithine, and lysine differed significantly from plasma arteriovenous differences. Uptakes of individual amino acids from plasma were poorly correlated with uptake from whole blood. These data clearly indicate that uptake data derived from plasma do not adequately represent whole blood amino acid uptake. © 1991, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.
CITATION STYLE
Hanigan, M. D., Calvert, C. C., DePeters, E. J., Reis, B. L., & Baldwin, R. L. (1991). Whole Blood and Plasma Amino Acid Uptakes by Lactating Bovine Mammary Glands. Journal of Dairy Science, 74(8), 2484–2490. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(91)78425-7
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