Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle

Lactation is a dynamic process, which evolved to meet dietary demands of growing offspring. At the same time, the mother’s metabolism changes to meet the high requirements of nutrient supply to the offspring. Through strong artificial selection, the strain of milk production on dairy cows is often a...

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Main Authors: Eva M. Strucken, Yan C. S. M. Laurenson, Gudrun A. Brockmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-03-01
Series:Frontiers in Genetics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2015.00118/full
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spelling doaj-30eb1fc6e8084af7ba3b575714bb78852020-11-24T22:55:27ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Genetics1664-80212015-03-01610.3389/fgene.2015.00118129788Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycleEva M. Strucken0Yan C. S. M. Laurenson1Gudrun A. Brockmann2University of New EnglandUniversity of New EnglandHumboldt-Universität zu BerlinLactation is a dynamic process, which evolved to meet dietary demands of growing offspring. At the same time, the mother’s metabolism changes to meet the high requirements of nutrient supply to the offspring. Through strong artificial selection, the strain of milk production on dairy cows is often associated with impaired health and fertility. This led to the incorporation of functional traits into breeding aims to counteract this negative association. Potentially, distributing the total quantity of milk per lactation cycle more equally over time could reduce the peak of physiological strain and improve health and fertility. During lactation many factors affect the production of milk: food intake; digestion, absorption, and transportation of nutrients; blood glucose levels; activity of cells in the mammary gland, liver, and adipose tissue; synthesis of proteins and fat in the secretory cells; and the metabolic and regulatory pathways that provide fatty acids, amino acids, and carbohydrates. Whilst the endocrine regulation and physiology of the dynamic process of milk production seems to be understood, the genetics that underlie these dynamics are still to be uncovered. Modeling of longitudinal traits and estimating the change in additive genetic variation over time has shown that the genetic contribution to the expression of a trait depends on the considered time-point. Such time-dependent studies could contribute to the discovery of missing heritability. Only very few studies have estimated exact gene and marker effects at different time-points during lactation. The most prominent gene affecting milk yield and milk fat, DGAT1, exhibits its main effects after peak production, whilst the casein genes have larger effects in early lactation. Understanding the physiological dynamics and elucidating the time-dependent genetic effects behind dynamically expressed traits will contribute to selection decisions to further improve productive and healthy breeding populations.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2015.00118/fullLongitudinalgenome-wide associationgenomic selectionTime-dependentgenomic predictionsLactation curve
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eva M. Strucken
Yan C. S. M. Laurenson
Gudrun A. Brockmann
spellingShingle Eva M. Strucken
Yan C. S. M. Laurenson
Gudrun A. Brockmann
Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
Frontiers in Genetics
Longitudinal
genome-wide association
genomic selection
Time-dependent
genomic predictions
Lactation curve
author_facet Eva M. Strucken
Yan C. S. M. Laurenson
Gudrun A. Brockmann
author_sort Eva M. Strucken
title Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
title_short Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
title_full Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
title_fullStr Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
title_full_unstemmed Go with the flow - Biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
title_sort go with the flow - biology and genetics of the lactation cycle
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Genetics
issn 1664-8021
publishDate 2015-03-01
description Lactation is a dynamic process, which evolved to meet dietary demands of growing offspring. At the same time, the mother’s metabolism changes to meet the high requirements of nutrient supply to the offspring. Through strong artificial selection, the strain of milk production on dairy cows is often associated with impaired health and fertility. This led to the incorporation of functional traits into breeding aims to counteract this negative association. Potentially, distributing the total quantity of milk per lactation cycle more equally over time could reduce the peak of physiological strain and improve health and fertility. During lactation many factors affect the production of milk: food intake; digestion, absorption, and transportation of nutrients; blood glucose levels; activity of cells in the mammary gland, liver, and adipose tissue; synthesis of proteins and fat in the secretory cells; and the metabolic and regulatory pathways that provide fatty acids, amino acids, and carbohydrates. Whilst the endocrine regulation and physiology of the dynamic process of milk production seems to be understood, the genetics that underlie these dynamics are still to be uncovered. Modeling of longitudinal traits and estimating the change in additive genetic variation over time has shown that the genetic contribution to the expression of a trait depends on the considered time-point. Such time-dependent studies could contribute to the discovery of missing heritability. Only very few studies have estimated exact gene and marker effects at different time-points during lactation. The most prominent gene affecting milk yield and milk fat, DGAT1, exhibits its main effects after peak production, whilst the casein genes have larger effects in early lactation. Understanding the physiological dynamics and elucidating the time-dependent genetic effects behind dynamically expressed traits will contribute to selection decisions to further improve productive and healthy breeding populations.
topic Longitudinal
genome-wide association
genomic selection
Time-dependent
genomic predictions
Lactation curve
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fgene.2015.00118/full
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