Maternal 25-Hydroxycholecalciferol Supplementation Dynamically Altered Milk Fatty Acid and Amino Acid Profiles and Improves Sow Performance
Liang Wang, Haitong Wang, Peipei Wen, Yikai Fan, Xiaoli Ren, Yongqing Li, Chu Chu, Li Liu, Juncheng Huang, Bo Hu, Huaiyong Zhang, Shujun Zhang

TL;DR
This study shows that adding 25-hydroxycholecalciferol to a sow's diet changes milk composition and improves piglet growth and sow health.
Contribution
The study reveals how maternal 25-OH-D3 supplementation dynamically alters milk fatty acid and amino acid profiles, linking these changes to improved sow and piglet performance.
Findings
25-OH-D3 supplementation increased weaning weight and piglet weight gain.
Milk fatty acid levels were suppressed early but recovered later, especially for oleic and linoleic acids.
Amino acid concentrations dropped faster in supplemented sows, suggesting altered milk composition.
Abstract
Given the presence of vitamin D receptors in mammary glands and their more efficient absorbability, this study was performed to evaluate the effects of maternal 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OH-D3) supplementation on sow performance, as well as the dynamic alterations of both the amino acid and fatty acid profiles in milk. Herein, the concentration of all amino acids in milk was higher in colostrum, following a dramatic drop. The rate of reduction for all amino acids was increased by dietary 25-OH-D3 supplementation. The addition of dietary 25-OH-D3 initially suppressed both saturated and unsaturated fatty acid levels from days 1 to 7. Subsequently, the 25-OH-D3 group exhibited elevated levels of specific fatty acids relative to the control during l4 to 21 d of lactation, especially oleic and linoleic acids and arachidonic acid. These findings support the hypothesis that maternal…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Vitamin D Research Studies · Animal Behavior and Welfare Studies
