Plasma biomarkers of feed efficiency differ across two contrasting diets in growing beef cattle
Résumé
Beef cattle industry could benefit from the identification of individuals with superior feed efficiency. Thus, biomarkers
should be developed and validated to contribute to this objective. This study aimed to explore plasma biomarkers
of residual feed intake (RFI) in fattening beef cattle through a targeted metabolomics approach. For this, 167 young
Charolais bulls were tested for RFI in 3 independent cohorts during at least 6 months. Animals within each cohort
were evenly assigned to either a high-starch corn silage diet or a high-fibre grass silage diet. Blood was sampled from
each animal one month before the end of the test. Plasma from the 48 most extreme animals in terms of RFI (24 low
vs 24 high RFI; balanced within cohorts and diets) were analysed for 630 metabolites by FIA- or LC- tandem mass
spectrometry. Metabolites were analysed by ANOVA separately for each diet including the fixed effect of cohort, RFI
group and their interaction. In the corn silage diet, plasma concentration of the 3 branched-chain amino acids (BCAA;
Leu, Ile and Val) was lower (-15%; P≤0.01) in low-compared to high-RFI, likely reflecting their higher metabolic
use for protein synthesis and muscle accretion. In contrast, creatinine and hydroxyl-proline, markers of muscle and
collagen body mass respectively, showed higher plasma concentration (+18-20%; P≤0.01) in low- compared to
high-RFI animals. In the grass silage diet, most of the RFI discriminant metabolites belonged to different classes of
triglycerides and their plasma concentrations were always higher (+50% on average; P=0.003) in low- compared
to high RFI animals, indicating either their lower incorporation into fat cells or their lower use as energy substrate
by the muscle. Only creatinine was a common RFI discriminant metabolite in the two diets and Val, though also
discriminant, showed opposite trends. Our results suggest that discriminant metabolites of RFI are not the same across
two contrasting diets. However, differences in muscle body mass revealed by plasma creatinine concentration seems
to be a determinant of RFI regardless the diet.