Lipoprotein Metabolism in the Preruminant Calf: Effect of a High Fat Diet Supplemented with L-Methionine

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Abstract

The effects of dietary lipid and L-Met supplementation on plasma lipids and lipoproteins were investigated in 16-wk-old preruminant calves. Four calves received the basal milk diet (2.0 g of lipid/kg of BW per meal) for 8 d followed by the same diet supplemented with L-Met (2.6 g/kg of dietary DM) for 5 d. Similarly, seven calves received successively the basal diet supplemented with cream (2.7 g of lipid/kg of BW per meal) and the same diet supplemented with L-Met. The diet with cream induced higher triglyceridemia than the basal diet because of a marked increase in chylomicra and in very low density lipoproteins, which suggested stimulation of intestinal lipoprotein secretion. Moreover, this lipid-enriched diet stimulated the formation of very light high density lipoproteins to the detriment of heavy high density lipoproteins. These particles, the bovine counterpart of mammalian high density lipoproteins of type 1, were distributed within the density range of low density lipoproteins. Addition of L-Met in the diets increased plasma concentrations of chylomicra and very low density lipoproteins, suggesting direct stimulation of the intestinal secretion of both of these lipoproteins and of the hepatic very low density lipoproteins. No effect of L-Met was observed on the concentrations and the physicochemical properties of low and light high density lipoproteins. © 1994, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.

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Auboiron, S., Durand, D., Bauchart, D., Robert, J. C., & Chapman, M. J. (1994). Lipoprotein Metabolism in the Preruminant Calf: Effect of a High Fat Diet Supplemented with L-Methionine. Journal of Dairy Science, 77(7), 1870–1881. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(94)77129-0

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