Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle

Abstract Background Associative data and some controlled studies suggest that the inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α can induce fatty liver in dairy cattle. However, research demonstrating that TNFα is a necessary component in the etiology of bovine fatty liver is lacking. The aim o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: C. A. Martel, L. K. Mamedova, J. E. Minton, M. Garcia, C. Legallet, B. J. Bradford
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-01-01
Series:Journal of Animal Science and Biotechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40104-017-0224-y
id doaj-afce785c003a47cd8bc34dc335ab30be
record_format Article
spelling doaj-afce785c003a47cd8bc34dc335ab30be2020-11-25T00:47:06ZengBMCJournal of Animal Science and Biotechnology2049-18912018-01-01911910.1186/s40104-017-0224-yEffects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattleC. A. Martel0L. K. Mamedova1J. E. Minton2M. Garcia3C. Legallet4B. J. Bradford5Department of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State UniversityDepartment of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State UniversityDepartment of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State UniversityDepartment of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State UniversityDepartment of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State UniversityDepartment of Animal Sciences and Industry, Kansas State UniversityAbstract Background Associative data and some controlled studies suggest that the inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α can induce fatty liver in dairy cattle. However, research demonstrating that TNFα is a necessary component in the etiology of bovine fatty liver is lacking. The aim of this work was to evaluate whether blocking TNFα signaling with a synthetic cyclic peptide (TNF receptor loop peptide; TRLP) would improve liver metabolic function and reduce triglyceride accumulation during feed restriction. Results Capability of TRLP to inhibit TNFα signaling was confirmed on primary bovine hepatocytes treated with recombinant bovine TNFα and 4 doses of TRLP (0, 1, 10, 50 μmol/L) over 24 h. Next, 4 lactating Holstein cows (parity 1.4 ± 0.5, 433 ± 131 d in milk) in an incomplete Latin rectangle design (3 × 2) were subcutaneously administered with different TRLP doses (0, 1.5, 3.0 mg/kg BW) every 4 h for 24 h, followed by an intravenous injection of TNFα (5 μg/kg BW). Before and for 2 h after TNFα injection, TRLP decreased plasma non-esterified fatty acid (NEFA) concentration (P ≤ 0.05), suggesting an altered metabolic response to inflammation. Finally, 10 non-pregnant, non-lactating Holstein cows (3.9 ± 1.1 yr of age) were randomly assigned to treatments: control (carrier: 57% DMSO in PBS) or TRLP (1.75 mg TRLP /kg BW per day). Treatments were administrated every 4 h for 7 d by subcutaneous injection to feed-restricted cows fed 30% of maintenance energy requirements. Daily blood samples were analyzed for glucose, insulin, β-hydroxybutyrate, NEFA, and haptoglobin concentrations, with no treatment effects detected. On d 7, cows completed a glucose tolerance test (GTT) by i.v. administration of a dextrose bolus (300 mg glucose/kg BW). Glucose, insulin, and NEFA responses failed to demonstrate any significant effect of treatment during the GTT. However, plasma and liver analyses were not indicative of dramatic lipolysis or hepatic lipidosis, suggesting that the feed restriction protocol failed to induce the metabolic state of interest. Injection site inflammation, assessed by a scorer blinded to treatment, was enhanced by TRLP compared to control. Conclusions Although the TRLP inhibited bovine TNFα signaling and altered responses to i.v. administration of TNFα, repeated use over 7 d caused apparent local allergic responses and it failed to alter metabolism during a feed restriction-induced negative energy balance. Although responses to feed restriction seemed atypical in this study, side effects of TRLP argue against its future use as a tool for investigating the role of inflammation in metabolic impacts of negative energy balance.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40104-017-0224-yDairy cowsFatty liverGlucose tolerance testTumor necrosis factor α
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author C. A. Martel
L. K. Mamedova
J. E. Minton
M. Garcia
C. Legallet
B. J. Bradford
spellingShingle C. A. Martel
L. K. Mamedova
J. E. Minton
M. Garcia
C. Legallet
B. J. Bradford
Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
Journal of Animal Science and Biotechnology
Dairy cows
Fatty liver
Glucose tolerance test
Tumor necrosis factor α
author_facet C. A. Martel
L. K. Mamedova
J. E. Minton
M. Garcia
C. Legallet
B. J. Bradford
author_sort C. A. Martel
title Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
title_short Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
title_full Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
title_fullStr Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
title_full_unstemmed Effects of TNF receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
title_sort effects of tnf receptor blockade on in vitro cell survival and response to negative energy balance in dairy cattle
publisher BMC
series Journal of Animal Science and Biotechnology
issn 2049-1891
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Background Associative data and some controlled studies suggest that the inflammatory cytokine tumor necrosis factor (TNF) α can induce fatty liver in dairy cattle. However, research demonstrating that TNFα is a necessary component in the etiology of bovine fatty liver is lacking. The aim of this work was to evaluate whether blocking TNFα signaling with a synthetic cyclic peptide (TNF receptor loop peptide; TRLP) would improve liver metabolic function and reduce triglyceride accumulation during feed restriction. Results Capability of TRLP to inhibit TNFα signaling was confirmed on primary bovine hepatocytes treated with recombinant bovine TNFα and 4 doses of TRLP (0, 1, 10, 50 μmol/L) over 24 h. Next, 4 lactating Holstein cows (parity 1.4 ± 0.5, 433 ± 131 d in milk) in an incomplete Latin rectangle design (3 × 2) were subcutaneously administered with different TRLP doses (0, 1.5, 3.0 mg/kg BW) every 4 h for 24 h, followed by an intravenous injection of TNFα (5 μg/kg BW). Before and for 2 h after TNFα injection, TRLP decreased plasma non-esterified fatty acid (NEFA) concentration (P ≤ 0.05), suggesting an altered metabolic response to inflammation. Finally, 10 non-pregnant, non-lactating Holstein cows (3.9 ± 1.1 yr of age) were randomly assigned to treatments: control (carrier: 57% DMSO in PBS) or TRLP (1.75 mg TRLP /kg BW per day). Treatments were administrated every 4 h for 7 d by subcutaneous injection to feed-restricted cows fed 30% of maintenance energy requirements. Daily blood samples were analyzed for glucose, insulin, β-hydroxybutyrate, NEFA, and haptoglobin concentrations, with no treatment effects detected. On d 7, cows completed a glucose tolerance test (GTT) by i.v. administration of a dextrose bolus (300 mg glucose/kg BW). Glucose, insulin, and NEFA responses failed to demonstrate any significant effect of treatment during the GTT. However, plasma and liver analyses were not indicative of dramatic lipolysis or hepatic lipidosis, suggesting that the feed restriction protocol failed to induce the metabolic state of interest. Injection site inflammation, assessed by a scorer blinded to treatment, was enhanced by TRLP compared to control. Conclusions Although the TRLP inhibited bovine TNFα signaling and altered responses to i.v. administration of TNFα, repeated use over 7 d caused apparent local allergic responses and it failed to alter metabolism during a feed restriction-induced negative energy balance. Although responses to feed restriction seemed atypical in this study, side effects of TRLP argue against its future use as a tool for investigating the role of inflammation in metabolic impacts of negative energy balance.
topic Dairy cows
Fatty liver
Glucose tolerance test
Tumor necrosis factor α
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40104-017-0224-y
work_keys_str_mv AT camartel effectsoftnfreceptorblockadeoninvitrocellsurvivalandresponsetonegativeenergybalanceindairycattle
AT lkmamedova effectsoftnfreceptorblockadeoninvitrocellsurvivalandresponsetonegativeenergybalanceindairycattle
AT jeminton effectsoftnfreceptorblockadeoninvitrocellsurvivalandresponsetonegativeenergybalanceindairycattle
AT mgarcia effectsoftnfreceptorblockadeoninvitrocellsurvivalandresponsetonegativeenergybalanceindairycattle
AT clegallet effectsoftnfreceptorblockadeoninvitrocellsurvivalandresponsetonegativeenergybalanceindairycattle
AT bjbradford effectsoftnfreceptorblockadeoninvitrocellsurvivalandresponsetonegativeenergybalanceindairycattle
_version_ 1725261971245236224