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Journal of animal science2015; 93(7); 3261-3267; doi: 10.2527/jas.2015-9057

HORSE SPECIES SYMPOSIUM: Nutritional programming and the impact on mare and foal performance.

Abstract: Many environmental factors can alter the phenotype of offspring when applied during critical periods of early development. In most domestic species, maternal nutrition influences fetal development and the fetus is sensitive to the nutrition of the dam during pregnancy. Many experimental models have been explored including both under- and overnutrition of the dam. Both nutritional strategies have yielded potential consequences including altered glucose tolerance, pancreatic endocrine function, insulin sensitivity, body composition, and colostrum quality. Although the impact of maternal nutrition on fetal development in the equine has not been thoroughly investigated, overnutrition is a common occurrence in the industry. Work in our laboratory has focused on effects of maternal overnutrition on mare and foal performance, mare DMI, foaling parameters, colostrum quality and passive transfer of immunity, and glucose and insulin dynamics. Over several trials, mares were fed either 100 or 140% of NRC requirements for DE, and supplemental Se and arginine were added to diets in an attempt to mitigate potential intrauterine growth retardation resulting from dams overfed during the last third of pregnancy. As expected, when mares were overfed, BW, BCS, and rump fat values increased. Foal growth over 150 d was also not influenced. Maternal nutrition did not alter colostrum volume but influenced colostrum quality. Maternal overnutrition resulted in lower colostrum IgG concentrations but did not cause failure of passive transfer in foals. Supplemental Se and arginine were unable to mitigate this reduction in colostrum IgG. Additionally, mare and foal glucose and insulin dynamics were influenced by maternal nutrition. Mare glucose and insulin area under the curve (AUC) increased with increased concentrate supplementation. Foal insulin AUC and peak insulin concentrations were increased when mares were fed concentrate and, in a later trial, foal peak glucose values were reduced with arginine supplementation of the mare. This influence of maternal nutrition on glucose and insulin dynamics warrants further investigation because it may be related to athletic performance and metabolic disease in the adult. Further studies will be necessary to fully elucidate the influence of mare nutrition during pregnancy on development of the fetus as well as long-term consequences of developmental programming.
Publication Date: 2015-10-07 PubMed ID: 26439994DOI: 10.2527/jas.2015-9057Google Scholar: Lookup
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Summary

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The research assesses how a mare’s nutrition during pregnancy impacts the development of its foal, with specific emphasis on problems caused by overnutrition. Some key findings include alterations in colostrum quality, glucose and insulin dynamics, and no significant influence on foal growth up to 150 days.

Nutritional Strategies and Outcomes in the Study

  • The research employed two key dietary strategies: feeding mares either under or excess of National Research Council (NRC) requirements for Digestible Energy (DE).
  • The overnutrition strategy provided a diet of 140% NRC requirements for DE, with additional selenium (Se) and arginine to potentially counter intrauterine growth retardation. An expected result of overnutrition was an increase in Body Weight (BW), Body Condition Score (BCS), and rump fat values of the mares.

The Impact on Mare and Foal Performance

  • Foal growth over the initial 150 days wasn’t significantly impacted by the mare’s nutritional intake.
  • Mares’ nutrition influenced the quality, but not the volume, of the colostrum they produced. Overnutrition led to lower immunoglobulin G (IgG) concentrations in colostrum.
  • Despite the decrease in colostrum IgG, foals were not observed to have insufficient immunity, known as “failure of passive transfer.”

Additional Supplements and their Effects

  • Supplementary selenium and arginine added to the diet failed to mitigate the decrease in colostrum IgG resulting from mare overnutrition.
  • The research identified that maternal nutrition influenced glucose and insulin dynamics in mares and their foals. Specifically, increased concentrate supplementation led to larger glucose and insulin area under the curve (AUC) in mares. Similarly, foals also had increased insulin AUC and peak insulin concentrations when their mothers were fed with concentrates.
  • In a subsequent trial, arginine supplementation reduced the peak glucose values in foals.

Consequences and Future Research

  • The investigators argue that the observed influence of maternal nutrition on glucose and insulin dynamics demands further exploration as it could relate to adult metabolic diseases and athletic performance.
  • The findings effective set the stage for more comprehensive studies to fully understand the impacts of maternal nutrition during pregnancy on foal development and any long-term implications of this developmental programming.

Cite This Article

APA
Coverdale JA, Hammer CJ, Walter KW. (2015). HORSE SPECIES SYMPOSIUM: Nutritional programming and the impact on mare and foal performance. J Anim Sci, 93(7), 3261-3267. https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2015-9057

Publication

ISSN: 1525-3163
NlmUniqueID: 8003002
Country: United States
Language: English
Volume: 93
Issue: 7
Pages: 3261-3267

Researcher Affiliations

Coverdale, J A
    Hammer, C J
      Walter, K W

        MeSH Terms

        • Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
        • Animals
        • Diet / veterinary
        • Female
        • Glucose / metabolism
        • Horses / growth & development
        • Horses / physiology
        • Insulin / metabolism
        • Maternal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena
        • Pregnancy

        Citations

        This article has been cited 3 times.
        1. Turini L, Francesca B, Matilde V, Francesca B, Valentina M, Micaela S. Immunity transfer in mule foals fed with good IgG quality colostrum. Heliyon 2024 Feb 15;10(3):e25560.
          doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e25560pubmed: 38327457google scholar: lookup
        2. Hallman I, Karikoski N, Kareskoski M. The effects of obesity and insulin dysregulation on mare reproduction, pregnancy, and foal health: a review. Front Vet Sci 2023;10:1180622.
          doi: 10.3389/fvets.2023.1180622pubmed: 37152686google scholar: lookup
        3. Turini L, Bonelli F, Nocera I, Battaglia F, Meucci V, Panzani D, Mele M, Sgorbini M. Evaluation of jennies' colostrum: IgG concentrations and absorption in the donkey foals. A preliminary study. Heliyon 2020 Aug;6(8):e04598.
          doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2020.e04598pubmed: 32775752google scholar: lookup