Author
Listed:
- Hongwei Li
- Xiaohang Wang
- Michael Vinsky
- Ghader Manafiazar
- Carolyn Fitzsimmons
- Liang Li
- Changxi Li
Abstract
Reducing enteric methane (one greenhouse gas) emissions from beef cattle not only can be beneficial in reducing global warming, but also improve efficiency of nutrient utilization in the production system. However, direct measurement of enteric methane emissions on individual cattle is difficult and expensive. The objective of this study was to detect plasma metabolites that are associated with enteric methane emissions in beef cattle. Average enteric methane emissions (CH4) per day (AVG_DAILYCH4) for each individual cattle were measured using the GreenFeed emission monitoring (GEM) unit system, and beef cattle with divergent AVG_DAILYCH4 from Angus (n = 10 for the low CH4 group and 9 for the high CH4 group), Charolais (n = 10 for low and 10 for = high), and Kinsella Composite (n = 10 for low and 10 for high) populations were used for plasma metabolite quantification and metabolite-CH4 association analyses. Blood samples of these cattle were collected near the end of the GEM system tests and a high performance four-channel chemical isotope labeling (CIL) liquid chromatography (LC) mass spectrometer (MS) method was applied to identify and quantify concentrations of metabolites. The four-channel CIL LC-MS method detected 4235 metabolites, of which 1105 were found to be significantly associated with AVG_DAILYCH4 by a t-test, while 1305 were significantly associated with AVG_DAILYCH4 by a regression analysis at p
Suggested Citation
Hongwei Li & Xiaohang Wang & Michael Vinsky & Ghader Manafiazar & Carolyn Fitzsimmons & Liang Li & Changxi Li, 2024.
"Analyses of plasma metabolites using a high performance four-channel CIL LC-MS method and identification of metabolites associated with enteric methane emissions in beef cattle,"
PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 19(3), pages 1-24, March.
Handle:
RePEc:plo:pone00:0299268
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0299268
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