Effects of dietary L-carnitine supplementation on the response to an inflammatory challenge in mid-lactating dairy cows: hepatic mRNA abundance of genes involved in fatty acid metabolism

Published: 17 May 2021| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/zvy52f7n33.1
Contributor:
Morteza Hosseini Ghaffari

Description

Supplemental Figure S1. (A) Milk yield, (B) dry matter intake (DMI), and (C) net energy balance (EB) in cows fed non-supplemented (Control) or an L-carnitine-supplemented diet (Carnitine). Data are given as LS-means ± SE. Data for milk yield, DMI, and EB are from Meyer et al. (2021). Supplemental Figure S2. Blood concentrations of (A) insulin, (B) glucose, (C) ß-hydroxybutyrate (BHB), (D) fatty acids (FA) in cows fed non-supplemented (Control) or an L-carnitine-supplemented diet (Carnitine). Data are given as LS-means ± SE. Data for insulin, glucose, BHB, and FA are from Meyer et al. (2021). Supplemental Figure S3. Volcano plot visualizing the hepatic mRNA abundance of genes in cows fed non-supplemented (CON, n = 21) compared to those fed L-carnitine supplemented (CAR, n = 22) diets on d +14 relative to the LPS administration. The x-axis represents the mean of log2 fold-change (FC = 1.5) value, and the y-axis corresponds to the negative logarithm of the P-values (FDR = 0.05). Each dot represents a single mRNA.

Files

Categories

Dairy Science

Licence