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Effects of feeding lutein on production performance,antioxidative status,and milk quality of high-yielding dairy cows
Authors:C.Z. Xu  H.F. Wang  J.Y. Yang  J.H. Wang  Z.Y. Duan  C. Wang  J.X. Liu  Y. Lao
Affiliation:* College of Animal Science and Technology, Zhejiang A & F University, Lin’an 311300, P. R. China; Institute of Dairy Science, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310029, P. R. China; Animal Husbandry Technology Promotion Station of Zhejiang Province, Hangzhou 310021, P. R. China;§ Kemin Industries (Zhuhai) Co. Ltd., Zhuhai 519040, P. R. China
Abstract:This experiment was conducted to determine the influences of supplementing different levels of an additive containing lutein in the diet of Chinese Holstein lactating cows on production performance, antioxidative plasma metabolites, and milk quality. This study was performed on 60 multiparous Holstein dairy cows in peak lactation. The cows were randomly allocated to 1 of 4 homogeneous treatments, with lutein preparation (extracted from marigolds; effective lutein content was 2%) added at levels of 0, 100, 150, and 200 g/d per head, with the actual available amounts being 0, 2, 3, and 4 g of lutein/d per head, respectively. The experiment lasted for 13 wk, with the first week for adaptation. Milk yield and milk compositions were recorded weekly, and milk concentrations of lutein, dry matter intake, and antioxidative blood index were analyzed in the first, fourth, seventh, and thirteenth week of the study. The results showed that adding lutein in the diet had no effect on dry matter intake compared with the control group; however, it slowed down the trend of decline in milk yield, and had a linear incremental effect on milk yield with increasing concentration of lutein. Dietary lutein tended to quadratically increase the percentage of milk fat, and linearly increased milk lactose concentration, with the highest value when treated at 200 g of lutein preparation/d per head, and decreased somatic cell count, with the lowest values when treated with 150 and 200 g of lutein preparation/d per head. The concentration of lutein in milk linearly increased with the incorporation of the additive, with a value of 0.59, 0.70, 1.20, and 1.50 μg/100 mL when treated with 0, 100, 150, and 200 g/d, respectively. Total plasma antioxidant capacity tended to linearly increase in cows fed lutein preparation, whereas plasma superoxide dismutase and glutathione peroxidase activities did not differ significantly. In conclusion, addition of lutein in the diet could improve the production performance and health status of dairy cows.
Keywords:lutein   dairy cow   milk performance   antioxidative status
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