Altering the composition of ruminant-derived foods for improved human

health

Kevin J. Shingfield1, Sirja Viitala2, Heidi Leskinen1 and Johanna Vilkki2

1Animal Production Research, MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Jokioinen FI-31600,

Finland

2Biotechnology and Food Research, MTT Agrifood Research Finland, Jokioinen FI-

31600, Finland

Clinical trials and biomedical studies in animal models have provided evidence that

nutrition plays an important role in the development of chronic diseases in the human

population including cancer, cardiovascular disease (CVD), insulin resistance and

obesity (Shingfield et al. 2008). Direct and indirect costs of CVD have been estimated

to cost the 25 member states of the EU €169 billion per annum (Leal et al. 2006). In

order to reduce the economic and social burden of chronic disease public health

policies in developed countries have placed greater emphasis on the development of

diets or specific dietary components that enhance or with the potential to improve

human health as part of an overall strategy for disease prevention.

Studies in human subjects have indicated that saturated fatty acids (SFA) and trans

fatty acids (TFA) in the diet increase CVD risk, with emerging evidence that excessive

intakes of SFA may also be associated with lowered insulin sensitivity which is a key

factor in the development of the metabolic syndrome. Even though it is generally

accepted that SFA raise plasma total and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol

concentrations, atherogenic effects are confined to the medium-chain fatty acids,

lauric (12:0), myristic (14:0) and palmitic acid (16:0). Furthermore, cell culture and

biomedical studies have provided evidence to suggest that isomers of conjugated

linoleic acid (CLA) may have important physiological roles with respect to

mutagenesis, CVD, diabetes, bone formation, nutrient partitioning and immunity

(Shingfield et al. 2008). For industrialised countries, milk and dairy products are the

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major source of 12:0 and 14:0 in the human diet, while ruminant-derived foods are

the principle source of CLA and also make a major contribution to total 16:0 and TFA

consumption (Givens and Shingfield, 2006). However, developing public health policies

promoting a decrease in the consumption of milk, cheese, butter, lamb and beef

ignores the value of these foods as a versatile source of nutrients. Altering the fatty

acid composition of ruminant meat and milk fat more in line with public health

recommendations, rather than simply promoting a population-wide decrease in the

consumption of these foods would enable SFA intakes to be reduced and the supply of

CLA in the human food chain to be increased without requiring changes in consumer

eating habits, whilst at the same time maintaining the potential benefits associated

with the macro and micro nutrients in these foods.

Nutritional regulation of milk and meat fatty acid composition has been the subject of

intense research during the last few decades. Considerable progress has been made

towards understanding the role of diet on enhancing the nutritional value of ruminantderived

foods while more recent studies have attempted to elucidate the molecular

mechanisms underlying the changes in milk and tissue lipid fatty acid composition in

ruminants. Diet is the major environmental factor influencing the CLA content of

ruminant milk whilst the effects of genotype, stage of lactation and parity are

relatively minor (Palmquist el al. 2005). Concentrations of CLA in ruminant meat are

dependent on diet, gender, slaughter weight and breed with evidence of variable

enrichment between tissues. Increases in the proportion of dietary energy derived

from fresh forage or inclusion of plant oils, oilseeds or marine lipids in the diet can be

used to enhance the CLA content of ruminant milk and meat, but also result in an

inevitable increase in TFA concentrations. Nutritional and management strategies can

be used to enhance the CLA content of ruminant milk (range 0.5-10.1 g/100 g fatty

acids) and meat (4-134 mg/100 g muscle). Furthermore, estimates of heritability of

Δ-9 desaturase in the bovine indicate the potential to further enhance CLA in ruminant

milk and meat through genetic selection.

Milk fat is comprised of triacylglycerides (96-98% of total milk lipids) and contains

more than 400 individual fatty acids, but quantitatively SFA of chain lengths from 4 to

18 carbon atoms, 16:1 cis-9, 18:1 cis-9, trans 18:1 and 18:2n-6 are the most

abundant (Shingfield et al. 2008). Fatty acids secreted in milk fat are derived from two

sources, uptake of preformed fatty acids from peripheral circulation and fatty acid

synthesis in mammary secretory cells. Fatty acid synthesis de novo contributes to ca.

40% by weight or 60% on a molar basis to total fatty acid secretion in milk. Long

chain fatty acids containing 16 or more carbon atoms are known to lower mammary

de novo fatty acid synthesis due to direct inhibitory effects on acetyl-CoA carboxylase

(E.C. 6.4.1.2; Barber et al., 1997) with the effects being more potent for fatty acids

containing a longer carbon chain and/or higher degree of unsaturation. Decreases in

the secretion of fatty acids synthesized de novo are associated with a reduction in the

activity and transcript abundance of acetyl-CoA carboxylase and fatty acid synthetase

(E.C. 2.3.1.85) in mammary tissue (Bernard et al., 2008). Altering the relative

contribution of preformed fatty acids and fatty acid synthesis de novo is central to

nutritional strategies to decrease concentrations of 12:0, 14:0 and 16:0 in milk fat.

Concentrations of medium chain SFA can be decreased by increasing the proportion of

energy from fresh forages and inclusion of plant oils or oilseeds in the diet. Changes in

milk fatty acid composition to lipid supplementation are dependent on i) the amount of

oil included in the diet, ii) fatty acid profile of the lipid supplement, iii) form of lipid in

the diet and/or processing of oilseeds and iv) composition of the basal diet (Chilliard et

al. 2007). Cultivation of different forage species may also assist in attempts to alter

milk fat composition, but the overall impact is related to forage conservation method,

the proportion of forage in the diet and composition of concentrate supplements

(Dewhurst et al., 2006; Chilliard et al., 2007). Milk fatty acid composition is known to

vary between cows fed the same diet suggesting a genetic component in the

regulation of milk fatty acid composition (Palmquist et al., 2005) Polymorphisms for

several lipogenic genes have recently been identified in the bovine confirming the

existence of genetic variation and highlighting the potential of genomic selection to

enhance the nutritional quality of ruminant milk.

References

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the lactating mammary gland. Biochimica et Biophysica Acta 1347, 101–126.

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lipogenic genes in the ruminant lactating mammary gland. In: Bösze, Z. (ed.)

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