Effects of nitrogen supply on inter-organ fluxes of urea-N and renal urea-N kinetics in lactating Holstein cows

The effects of decreasing ruminal urea infusion in lactating dairy cows fed a basal diet deficient in rumen degradable protein on inter-organ urea-N fluxes, epithelial urea-N extraction, and renal urea-N kinetics were investigated. Eight Danish Holstein cows fitted with a ruminal cannula and permane...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of dairy science 2011-05, Vol.94 (5), p.2532-2544
Hauptverfasser: Røjen, B.A., Theil, P.K., Kristensen, N.B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The effects of decreasing ruminal urea infusion in lactating dairy cows fed a basal diet deficient in rumen degradable protein on inter-organ urea-N fluxes, epithelial urea-N extraction, and renal urea-N kinetics were investigated. Eight Danish Holstein cows fitted with a ruminal cannula and permanent indwelling catheters in the major splanchnic blood vessels and the gastrosplenic vein were used. The cows were randomly allocated to a triplicate incomplete 3×3 Latin square design with 14-d periods. Treatments were continuous ventral ruminal infusion of water, 4.1g of feed urea/kg of dry matter intake, and 8.5g of feed urea/kg of dry matter intake. Dry matter intake and milk yield decreased linearly with decreasing urea infusion. Arterial blood urea-N and ruminal ammonia concentrations decreased linearly with decreasing urea infusion. In absolute amounts, the urea-N recycling did not increase when urea infusion was decreased. Arterial urea-N extraction across the portal-drained viscera and rumen wall increased linearly with decreasing urea infusion (2.46, 3.65, and 4.32±0.31% and 7.5, 11.5, and 16.9±0.9%, respectively), indicating that cows responded to the changes in N supply. The relative urea-N extraction across the ruminal wall increased compared with the total portal-drained viscera extraction. We observed a postprandial decrease in ruminal extraction of arterial urea-N that might reflect that the activity of the protein, presumably facilitating urea-N transport, is regulated by ruminal ammonia. The urea-N clearance by the kidneys decreased (35, 30, and 25±2L/h) and the urea-N reabsorbed by the kidney increased (42, 51 and 56±3%) with decreasing urea infusion, indicating that the kidneys salvaged urea-N with low-N supply. The urea transporter B mRNA abundance in rumen papillae (papillae harvested at sampling days) was not affected by dietary N supply. The study showed, that rumen wall extraction of arterial urea-N is subjected to both long- and short-term regulation. Extraction increases with decreasing N supply long-term; however, a short-term postprandial decrease in extraction was observed. No association between long-term adaptation of urea-N extraction across the rumen wall and urea transporter B mRNA abundance could be demonstrated.
ISSN:0022-0302
1525-3198
DOI:10.3168/jds.2010-3949