Influence of Prepubertal Dietary Regimen on Mammary Growth of Holstein Heifers

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Abstract

One hundred-sixteen Holstein heifers (mean BW, 175 kg) were randomly assigned to diets of alfalfa silage or corn silage and were fed to gain approximately 725 or 950 g/d in order to study the influence of prepubertal diet and rate of gain on mammary growth and milk production. Blood was collected before puberty for hormone determination, and 8 heifers per group were killed at puberty for evaluation of tissue variables. Serum growth hormone was reduced, and IGF-I was increased, in the group of heifers reared at a high rate of gain on the corn silage diet. Accompanying the decline in growth hormone, total mammary parenchymal DNA and RNA was reduced in heifers reared at a high rate of gain on the corn silage diet. Mammary parenchyma in heifers of the latter group contained a greater volume of adipocytes and a lower volume of epithelial cells than did mammary parenchyma in heifers of other groups. Data are consistent with previous investigations that showed a deleterious effect of prepubertal rapid weight gain on mammogenesis when accompanied by excess body fat deposition. However, this effect did not cause a decline in subsequent milk production. © 1995, American Dairy Science Association. All rights reserved.

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Capuco, A. V., Smith, J. J., Waldo, D. R., & Rexroad, C. E. (1995). Influence of Prepubertal Dietary Regimen on Mammary Growth of Holstein Heifers. Journal of Dairy Science, 78(12), 2709–2725. https://doi.org/10.3168/jds.S0022-0302(95)76902-8

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