6 results on '"Frédéric Colinet"'
Search Results
2. Assessing the effect of pregnancy stage on milk composition of dairy cows using mid-infrared spectra
- Author
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Nicolas Gengler, Frédéric Colinet, Laura-Monica Dale, Jérémie Vandenplas, Catherine Bastin, Hedi Hammami, Frédéric Dehareng, Clément Grelet, Aurélie Laine, and Alain Gillon
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0301 basic medicine ,Bovine milk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Mid infrared ,Biology ,Breeding ,03 medical and health sciences ,Animal science ,fluids and secretions ,Pregnancy ,Internal medicine ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Lactation ,Pregnancy stage ,Fokkerij & Genomica ,Dairy cattle ,milk mid-infrared spectrum ,dairy cow ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,medicine.disease ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Milk sample ,Parity ,030104 developmental biology ,Endocrinology ,Milk ,Phenotype ,Herd ,WIAS ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Composition (visual arts) ,Cattle ,Female ,pregnancy ,Food Science ,Animal Breeding & Genomics - Abstract
Changes in milk production traits (i.e., milk yield, fat, and protein contents) with the pregnancy stage are well documented. To our knowledge, the effect of pregnancy on the detailed milk composition has not been studied so far. The mid-infrared (MIR) spectrum reflects the detailed composition of a milk sample and is obtained by a nonexhaustive and widely used method for milk analysis. Therefore, this study aimed to investigate the effect of pregnancy on milk MIR spectrum in addition to milk production traits (milk yield, fat, and protein contents). A model including regression on the number of days pregnant was applied on milk production traits (milk yield, fat, and protein contents) and on 212 spectral points from the MIR spectra of 9,757 primiparous Holstein cows from Walloon herds. Effects of pregnancy stage were expressed on a relative scale (effect divided by the squared root of the phenotypic variance); this allowed comparisons between effects on milk traits and on 212 spectral points. Effect of pregnancy stage on production traits were in line with previous studies indicating that the model accounted well for the pregnancy effect. Trends of the relative effect of the pregnancy stage on the 212 spectral points were consistent with known and observed effect on milk traits. The highest effect of the pregnancy was observed in the MIR spectral region from 968 to 1,577 cm−1. For some specific wavenumbers, the effect was higher than for fat and protein contents in the beginning of the pregnancy (from 30 to 90 or 120 d pregnant). In conclusion, the effect of early pregnancy can be observed in the detailed milk composition through the analysis of the MIR spectrum of bovine milk. Further analyses are warranted to explore deeply the use of MIR spectra of bovine milk for breeding and management of dairy cow pregnancy.
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- 2016
3. Development of Fourier transform mid-infrared calibrations to predict acetone, β-hydroxybutyrate, and citrate contents in bovine milk through a European dairy network
- Author
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Marine Gelé, Frédéric Dehareng, Nicolas Gengler, Jean-Bernard Davière, Pierre Dardenne, M. Johan, Catherine Bastin, Romain Reding, Frédéric Colinet, Clément Grelet, J.A. Fernández Pierna, Hélène Soyeurt, and Andreas Werner
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0301 basic medicine ,Coefficient of determination ,Cost-Benefit Analysis ,Cattle Diseases ,Mass spectrometry ,Citric Acid ,Acetone ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Germany ,Partial least squares regression ,Spectroscopy, Fourier Transform Infrared ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Flow injection analysis ,Chromatography ,3-Hydroxybutyric Acid ,Chemistry ,0402 animal and dairy science ,Reproducibility of Results ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Ketosis ,medicine.disease ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Dairying ,030104 developmental biology ,Milk ,Calibration ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Composition (visual arts) ,Cattle ,Female ,France ,Citric acid ,Food Science - Abstract
To manage negative energy balance and ketosis in dairy farms, rapid and cost-effective detection is needed. Among the milk biomarkers that could be useful for this purpose, acetone and β-hydroxybutyrate (BHB) have been proved as molecules of interest regarding ketosis and citrate was recently identified as an early indicator of negative energy balance. Because Fourier transform mid-infrared spectrometry can provide rapid and cost-effective predictions of milk composition, the objective of this study was to evaluate the ability of this technology to predict these biomarkers in milk. Milk samples were collected in commercial and experimental farms in Luxembourg, France, and Germany. Acetone, BHB, and citrate contents were determined by flow injection analysis. Milk mid-infrared spectra were recorded and standardized for all samples. After edits, a total of 548 samples were used in the calibration and validation data sets for acetone, 558 for BHB, and 506 for citrate. Acetone content ranged from 0.020 to 3.355mmol/L with an average of 0.103mmol/L; BHB content ranged from 0.045 to 1.596mmol/L with an average of 0.215mmol/L; and citrate content ranged from 3.88 to 16.12mmol/L with an average of 9.04mmol/L. Acetone and BHB contents were log-transformed and a part of the samples with low values was randomly excluded to approach a normal distribution. The 3 edited data sets were then randomly divided into a calibration data set (3/4 of the samples) and a validation data set (1/4 of the samples). Prediction equations were developed using partial least square regression. The coefficient of determination (R(2)) of cross-validation was 0.73 for acetone, 0.71 for BHB, and 0.90 for citrate with root mean square error of 0.248, 0.109, and 0.70mmol/L, respectively. Finally, the external validation was performed and R(2) obtained were 0.67 for acetone, 0.63 for BHB, and 0.86 for citrate, with respective root mean square error of validation of 0.196, 0.083, and 0.76mmol/L. Although the practical usefulness of the equations developed should be further verified with other field data, results from this study demonstrated the potential of Fourier transform mid-infrared spectrometry to predict citrate content with good accuracy and to supply indicative contents of BHB and acetone in milk, thereby providing rapid and cost-effective tools to manage ketosis and negative energy balance in dairy farms.
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- 2015
4. Capitalizing on fine milk composition for breeding and management of dairy cows
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Amélie Vanlierde, Catherine Bastin, Aurélie Laine, Sylvie Vanderick, Pierre Dardenne, Eric Froidmont, Hedi Hammami, Nicolas Gengler, Clément Grelet, Hélène Soyeurt, Marie-Laure Vanrobays, Frédéric Colinet, and Frédéric Dehareng
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0301 basic medicine ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biology ,Breeding ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Genetics ,Animals ,Quality (business) ,Lactose ,Dairy cattle ,media_common ,business.industry ,Scale (chemistry) ,0402 animal and dairy science ,food and beverages ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Additional research ,Biotechnology ,Dairying ,030104 developmental biology ,Milk ,Phenotype ,chemistry ,Trait ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cattle ,Female ,business ,Food Science - Abstract
The challenge of managing and breeding dairy cows is permanently adapting to changing production circumstances under socio-economic constraints. If managing and breeding address different timeframes of action, both need relevant phenotypes that allow for precise monitoring of the status of the cows, and their health, behavior, and well-being as well as their environmental impact and the quality of their products (i.e., milk and subsequently dairy products). Milk composition has been identified as an important source of information because it could reflect, at least partially, all these elements. Major conventional milk components such as fat, protein, urea, and lactose contents are routinely predicted by mid-infrared (MIR) spectrometry and have been widely used for these purposes. But, milk composition is much more complex and other nonconventional milk components, potentially predicted by MIR, might be informative. Such new milk-based phenotypes should be considered given that they are cheap, rapidly obtained, usable on a large scale, robust, and reliable. In a first approach, new phenotypes can be predicted from MIR spectra using techniques based on classical prediction equations. This method was used successfully for many novel traits (e.g., fatty acids, lactoferrin, minerals, milk technological properties, citrate) that can be then useful for management and breeding purposes. An innovation was to consider the longitudinal nature of the relationship between the trait of interest and the MIR spectra (e.g., to predict methane from MIR). By avoiding intermediate steps, prediction errors can be minimized when traits of interest (e.g., methane, energy balance, ketosis) are predicted directly from MIR spectra. In a second approach, research is ongoing to detect and exploit patterns in an innovative manner, by comparing observed with expected MIR spectra directly (e.g., pregnancy). All of these traits can then be used to define best practices, adjust feeding and health management, improve animal welfare, improve milk quality, and mitigate environmental impact. Under the condition that MIR data are available on a large scale, phenotypes for these traits will allow genetic and genomic evaluations. Introduction of novel traits into the breeding objectives will need additional research to clarify socio-economic weights and genetic correlations with other traits of interest.
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- 2015
5. Genetic analysis of lactoferrin content in bovine milk
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Marielle Georges, Valérie Arnould, Daniel Portetelle, Frédéric Colinet, Carlo Bertozzi, Nicolas Gengler, Robert Renaville, and Hélène Soyeurt
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Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Population ,Biology ,Genetic analysis ,Genetic correlation ,Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide ,Fats ,Gene Frequency ,Polymorphism (computer science) ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Lactation ,education ,Allele frequency ,education.field_of_study ,Lactoferrin ,Heritability ,medicine.disease ,Milk Proteins ,Mastitis ,Milk ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cattle ,Female ,Food Science - Abstract
Bovine lactoferrin (LF) is mainly present in milk and shows important physiological and biological functions. The aim of this study was to estimate the heritability and correlation values of LF content in bovine milk with different economic traits as milk yield (MY), fat and protein percentages, and somatic cell score (SCS). Variance components of the studied traits were estimated by REML using a multiple-trait mixed model. The obtained heritability (0.22) for LF content predicted using mid-infrared spectrometry (pLF) suggested the possibility of animal selection based on the increase of LF content in milk. The phenotypic and genetic correlation values calculated between pLF and SCS were moderate (0.31 and 0.24, respectively). Furthermore, a preliminary study of bovine LF gene polymorphism effects was performed on the same production traits. By PCR, all exons of the LF gene were amplified and then sequenced. Three new polymorphisms were detected in exon 2, exon 11, and intron 8. We examined the effects of LF gene polymorphisms of exons 2, 4, 9, 11, and 15, and intron 8 on pLF, MY, fat and protein percentages, and SCS. The different observed effects did not reach a significant level probably because of the characteristics of the studied population. However, the results were promising, and LF may be a potential indicator of mastitis. Further studies are necessary to evaluate the effect of genetic selection based on LF content on the improvement of mastitis resistance.
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- 2009
6. Genetic variability of lactoferrin content estimated by mid-infrared spectrometry in bovine milk
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Carlo Bertozzi, Frédéric Colinet, Pierre Dardenne, Valérie Arnould, Nicolas Gengler, Robert Renaville, Daniel Portetelle, and Hélène Soyeurt
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Spectrophotometry, Infrared ,Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay ,Breeding ,Genetic correlation ,Fats ,Animal science ,Quantitative Trait, Heritable ,Lactation ,Genetics ,medicine ,Animals ,Genetic variability ,biology ,Lactoferrin ,Genetic Variation ,Heritability ,medicine.disease ,Milk Proteins ,Breed ,Mastitis ,Pedigree ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Standard error ,Milk ,Immunology ,biology.protein ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Cattle ,Female ,Food Science - Abstract
The effects of lactoferrin (LF) on the immune system have already been shown by many studies. Unfortunately, the current methods used to measure LF levels in milk do not permit the study of the genetic variability of lactoferrin or the performance of routine genetic evaluations. The first aim of this research was to derive a calibration equation permitting the prediction of LF in milk by mid-infrared spectrometry (MIR). The calibration with partial least squares on 69 samples showed a ratio of standard error of cross-validation to standard deviation equal to 1.98. Based on this value, the calibration equation was used to establish an LF indicator trait (predicted LF; pLF) on a large number of milk samples (n = 7,690). A subsequent study of its variability was conducted, which confirmed that stage of lactation and lactation number influence the overall pLF level. Small differences in mean pLF among 7 dairy breeds were also observed. The pLF content of Jersey milk was significantly higher than that in Holstein milk. Therefore, the choice of breed could change the expected LF level. Heritability estimated for pLF was 19.7%. The genetic and phenotypic correlations between somatic cell score and pLF were 0.04 and 0.26, respectively. As somatic cell score increases in presence of mastitis, this observation seems to indicate that pLF, or a function of observed pLF, compared with expected LF might have potential as an indicator of mastitis. The negative genetic correlation (-0.36) between milk yield and pLF could indicate an undesirable effect of selection for high milk production on the overall LF level.
- Published
- 2007
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