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SLU publication database (SLUpub) (stage, solr2:8983)

Abstract

Feeding a high amount of starch-rich grains is common practice for performance horses even though the horse has evolved to eat a grass based, i.e. low starch diet. To our knowledge, there are no studies using metabolomics to investigate the effects of a high-starch diet in horses. In this study we investigated differences in the plasma metabolic profile of 6 Standardbred horses fed a no-starch, forage-only (F) diet or a high-starch forage-concentrate (FC) diet for 29 days, respectively in a crossover design. Postprandial plasma samples were collected on the morning of day 25 of each dietary period. Metabolomics analysis of plasma using a targeted 1H NMR resulted in the quantification of 52 metabolites. Both a univariate and multivariate analysis of metabolites was performed. The univariate analysis found increased (p < 0.05) plasma concentrations of 2-hydroxybutyrate, citrate, dimethyl sulfone, hippurate, methionine, myo-inositol and proline in diet F and higher concentrations of glycine in diet FC. A PLS-DA analysis could discriminate between diets with good predictive power (Q2 (cum) = 0.745, p = 0.032 in CV-ANOVA). We conclude that diet Fwas strongest identified by metabolites originating from host-microbial co-metabolism and that the clear metabolomic profile discrimination between diets may have implications for health, performance and behaviour.

Keywords

Diet; Forage; Starch; Metabolomics; Microbiota; NMR; Plasma

Published in

Scientific Reports
2025, volume: 15, number: 1, article number: 35576
Publisher: NATURE PORTFOLIO

SLU Authors

UKÄ Subject classification

Medical Bioscience
Animal and Dairy Science

Publication identifier

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-23422-z

Permanent link to this page (URI)

https://res.slu.se/id/publ/144431