Title
Understanding the metabolism of the dairy cow

CoPED ID
94d8b3a9-d065-4399-9073-68402aac89f5

Status
Active

Funders

Value
No funds listed.

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2020

End Date
Sept. 29, 2024

Description

More Like This


The dairy cow experiences an abrupt surge in energy demand at the onset of lactation, as glucose is prioritised to the mammary gland for milk production. This is exacerbated by a pronounced decline in feed intake around parturition. Like all organisms when energy economics shift either locally or systemically there are consequences for other processes. The intense reallocation of energy to meet milk requirements often results in metabolic disorders, excessive fatty acid mobilisation, fatty liver and a diminished immune response. Similarly, humans experience metabolic disease when energy utilization becomes dysregulated. The mitochondrion is central to the conversion of nutrients to energy and has an ability to adapt to different fuel sources. Mitochondrial adaptation has shown to be pivotal in many metabolic, lipid and immune disorders in humans and other species. Moreover, the communication between the mitochondrion and nuclear DNA is increasingly being recognised as important in epigenetic control, thus influencing metabolic functionality.
The aim of this project is to explore how the mitochondrion adapts to energy demands in the dairy cow, with the aim to identify areas of intervention; nutritional, management or genetic strategies which would reduce the burden of metabolic disease and improve welfare and performance.

Lisa Chakrabarti SUPER_PER
Nial O'Boyle STUDENT_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Metabolic disorders
  2. Metabolism
  3. Feeding
  4. Milk production
  5. Cows
  6. Energy
  7. Immune response
  8. Milk (cow's milk)
  9. Fatty acids
  10. Fatty liver
  11. Dairy cattle
  12. Mammary glands

Extracted key phrases
  1. Dairy cow
  2. Energy demand
  3. Energy utilization
  4. Energy economic
  5. Metabolic disorder
  6. Metabolic disease
  7. Metabolic functionality
  8. Excessive fatty acid mobilisation
  9. Abrupt surge
  10. Diminished immune response
  11. Immune disorder
  12. Metabolism
  13. Milk production
  14. Mitochondrion
  15. Milk requirement

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations