Abstract

The objective of this study was to examine the effect of nutrition during the first 12 wk of life on aspects of the physiological and transcriptional regulation of testicular and overall sexual development in the bull calf. Holstein Friesian bull calves with a mean (SD) age and bodyweight of 17.5 (2.85) d and 48.8 (5.30) kg, respectively, were assigned to either a high (HI; n = 15) or moderate (MOD; n = 15) plane of nutrition and were individually fed milk replacer and concentrate to achieve overall target growth rates of at least 1.0 and 0.5 kg/d, respectively. Throughout the trial, animal growth performance, feed intake, and systemic concentrations of metabolites, metabolic hormones, and reproductive hormones were assessed. Additionally, pulsatility of reproductive hormones (luteinizing hormone, follicle-stimulating hormone, and testosterone) was recorded at 15-min intervals during a 10-h period at 10 wk of age. At 87 ± 2.14 d of age, all calves were euthanized, testes were weighed, and testicular tissue was harvested. Differential expression of messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) candidate genes involved in testicular development was examined using quantitative polymerase chain reaction assays. All data were analyzed using the MIXED procedure in Statistical Analysis Software using terms for treatment as well as time for repeated measures. Blood metabolites and metabolic hormones generally reflected the improved metabolic status of the calves on the HI plane of nutrition though the concentrations of reproductive hormones were not affected by diet. Calves on the HI diet had greater mean (SED) slaughter weight (112.4 vs. 87.70 [2.98] kg; P < 0.0001) and testicular tissue weight (29.2 vs. 20.1 [2.21] g; P = 0.0003) than those on the MOD diet. Relative mRNA abundance data indicated advanced testicular development through upregulation of genes involved in cellular metabolism (SIRT1; P = 0.0282), cholesterol biosynthesis (EBP; P = 0.007), testicular function (INSL3; P = 0.0077), and Sertoli cell development (CLDN11; P = 0.0054) in HI compared with MOD calves. In conclusion, results demonstrate that offering dairy-bred male calves a high plane of nutrition during the first 3 mo of life not only improves growth performance and metabolic status but also advances testicular development consistent with more precocious sexual maturation.

Highlights

  • Assisted selection has facilitated the reliable identification of young genetically elite bulls within weeks of birth for potential use in artificial insemination (AI) programs (Taylor et al, 2018)

  • Relative messenger ribonucleic acid (mRNA) abundance data indicated advanced testicular development through upregulation of genes involved in cellular metabolism (SIRT1; P = 0.0282), cholesterol biosynthesis (EBP; P = 0.007), testicular function (INSL3; P = 0.0077), and Sertoli cell development (CLDN11; P = 0.0054) in HI compared with MOD calves

  • zinc sulfate turbidity (ZST) test performed on serum collected from all calves upon arrival at Grange research farm showed no difference between calves on HI and MOD dietary treatments (P = 0.8635)

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Summary

Introduction

Assisted selection has facilitated the reliable identification of young genetically elite bulls within weeks of birth for potential use in artificial insemination (AI) programs (Taylor et al, 2018). Calves offered a high plane of nutrition during the first 6 mo of life display earlier and enhanced LH secretion (Thundathil et al, 2016) Enhanced nutrition during this critical early-life period can directly affect hypothalamic gonadotropin-releasing hormone pulsatility, leading to enhanced LH pulsatility as well as subsequent testosterone (TT) synthesis and release (Brito et al, 2007a; Byrne et al, 2018). In a study carried out on Holstein Friesian bull calves, it was found that bull calves fed a high-energy diet from 8 to 33 wk of age experienced advanced aspects of sexual maturation and increased testes size, but hastened puberty or sperm production was not reflected (Harstine et al, 2015)

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