Abstract

Abstract There are a variety of acute and chronic psychological and physical stressors associated with management practices used in beef production systems. Primary challenges in feedlot cattle include heat stress, acute and subacute acidosis, weaning, transportation, feed deprivation/restriction, and social mixing/crowding. These stressors disturb the homeostatic state of the host and microbiome and cause acute or chronic inflammation resulting in damage to the gastrointestinal tract (GIT) epithelial barrier that leaves the animal vulnerable to enteric pathogens and toxins. A breach of the small intestinal barrier (leaky gut) allows unwanted pathogens and toxins to infiltrate into blood, causing infection, depressed feed intake, and diverts nutritional resources away from anabolic processes. We have demonstrated that intentionally inducing GIT inflammation in feedlot cattle with aspirin, which is known to cause mucosal injury and increase GIT barrier dysfunction, provides a model system to better understand the metabolic cost of leaky gut in grain-fed feedlot cattle. Indeed, aspirin increased leakage of chromium-EDTA into urine, raised serum concentrations of lipopolysaccharide binding protein (LBP), decreased growth by 4.5 to 8.5%, and re-partitioned carcass components from lean tissue (rib-eye area) into fat. Thus, the chronic inflammatory effects of leaky gut have the potential to create a significant economic loss. Our work also shows that in-feed administration of monensin and tylosin have offered a solution to the non-specific immune response observed in grain-fed cattle by increasing jejunal villus height to crypt depth ratio, diminishing leaky gut, and decreasing serum LBP. Finally, we have observed that molasses based liquid supplements increase ruminal butyrate concentration, resulting in improved gut barrier function, decreased serum inflammatory markers, and greater DMI and ADG in newly received feedlot cattle fed a 30% roughage diet.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call