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Innate immune responses of young bulls to a novel environment

Authors :
Elisabetta Razzuoli
Pietro Calà
Fabrizio Lazzara
Massimo Amadori
Leonardo Nanni Costa
Emilio Olzi
Simona Cafazzo
Angelo Ferrari
L. Archetti
Diego Magnani
Andrea Vitali
Nicola Lacetera
Razzuoli, Elisabetta
Olzi, Emilio
Calà, Pietro
Cafazzo, Simona
Magnani, Diego
Vitali, Andrea
Lacetera, Nicola
Archetti, Laura
Lazzara, Fabrizio
Ferrari, Angelo
NANNI COSTA, Leonardo
Amadori, Massimo
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Animal welfare during transportation has been investigated in several studies, as opposed to post-transportation phases. In this study, we evaluated the effect of a novel environment after transportation on 26 Friesian bulls, 242 ± 42 day-old, from ten different dairy farms. Animals were shipped to a breeding center in different seasons, and selected parameters of innate immunity (serum bactericidal activity, hemolytic complement, serum albumin, α, β, and γ-globulins, interleukin-6, TNF-α) were monitored before and after the arrival at days--4/0/4/15/30. Our results showed significant differences of IL-6 and TNF-α protein levels at destination in December (94 ± 1.3 pg/ml) and June (+788 pg/ml), respectively. Moreover, the serum levels of these cytokines increased between days 0 and 15 after the arrival, the modulation of IL-6 being in agreement with established models of physical and/or psychological stress. Concerning the modulation of albumin, alpha and beta-globulins, the highest levels were detected in April, whereas a significant decrease was observed between day 15 and 30 after arrival; on the contrary, γ-globulin levels significantly increased after day 15. The results of this study highlight the occurrence of innate immune responses of young bulls to the combined effects of climate (season) and novel farming conditions.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7c57933ed5f9c9c86cf11688cafa0f03