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J. Dairy Sci. 2009. 92:5154-5166. doi:10.3168/jds.2009-2259
© 2009 American Dairy Science Association ®

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Effects of providing two forms of supplemental methionine to periparturient Holstein dairy cows on feed intake and lactational performance1

R. S. Ordway*,2, S. E. Boucher{dagger}, N. L. Whitehouse{ddagger}, C. G. Schwab{ddagger} and B. K. Sloan§

* Blue Seal Richer Dairy Nutrition Inc., Sandy Creek, NY 13145
{dagger} William H. Miner Agricultural Research Institute, Chazy, NY 12921
{ddagger} Department of Animal and Nutritional Sciences, University of New Hampshire, Durham 03824
§ Adisseo Inc., Alpharetta, GA 30022

2 Corresponding author: ryan.ordway{at}blueseal.com

Eighteen primiparous and 42 multiparous Holstein cows were blocked according to parity and expected calving date and assigned randomly to 1 of 3 dietary treatments: 1) a basal diet (negative control), 2) the basal diet plus 2-hydroxy-4-methylthio butanoic acid isopropyl ester (MetaSmart, Adisseo Inc., Antony, France), or 3) the basal diet plus rumen-protected Met (Smartamine M, Adisseo Inc., Alpharetta, GA). Treatments were initiated 21 d before expected calving and continued through 140 d postpartum. Diets were similar in ingredient and chemical composition, except for the content of Met in metabolizable protein. MetaSmart [0.35% prepartum and 0.54% postpartum in diet dry matter (DM)] and Smartamine M (0.06% prepartum and 0.10% postpartum in diet DM) were added to the basal diet in amounts needed to achieve a 3.0:1 ratio of Lys to Met in metabolizable protein. Prepartum DM intake (DMI; 13.5 kg/d), body weight (687 kg), body condition score (3.81), postpartum milk yield (42.0 kg/d), milk fat yield (1,549 g/d), milk fat content (3.66%), milk true protein yield (1,192 g/d), and milk urea N content (12.9 mg/dL) were not different among treatments. Postpartum DMI and body condition score were greater and the ratios of milk:DMI and milk N:feed N were less for cows fed the MetaSmart diet than for cows fed the control and Smartamine M diets. Milk protein content was greater for the Smartamine M (2.87%) and MetaSmart (2.81%) treatments than for the control treatment (2.72%). Concentrations of Met and Met + Cys in total plasma AA were different among treatments, with values for the Smartamine M treatment being the highest, followed by the MetaSmart and control treatments. The results indicated that both MetaSmart and Smartamine M are effective in providing metabolizable Met, but clarification of their relative contributions to metabolizable Met is still needed.

Key Words: methionine • methionine analog • amino acid • dairy cow







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