Observations on the influence of high cell count on lipolysis in bovine milk

1979 ◽  
Vol 46 (3) ◽  
pp. 453-462 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amer M. A. Salih ◽  
Malcolm Anderson

SummaryThe effect that changes in composition which occur in milks possessing high cell counts have on milk lipolysis has been investigated. High cell counts were produced either by intramammary infusion of Escherichia coli endotoxin or Streptococcus agalactiae or by addition of washed cells which were isolated from milk obtained from quarters infused with endotoxin. Free fatty acid levels in milk were measured in terms of acid degree value (ADV) either as initial ADV measured immediately after milking or ADV developed after a prescribed incubation period.There was an increase in initial ADV after the infusion either of endotoxin or of Str. agalactiae relative to a control quarter. This increase appeared to be associated with changes in cell count, but in absolute terms the influence of cells on ADV became less as cell count increased. Neither type of infusion had any effect on lipoprotein lipase activity. The addition of washed cells to normal milk resulted in an increase in developed ADV, but the increment was not as large as that produced by the addition of 1% blood serum. When cream and skim-milk from endotoxin-treated quarters and control quarters were mixed in different combinations with and without additional cells, developed ADV was higher in those samples containing endotoxin cream and those with added cells. Milk from a quarter treated with endotoxin was diluted with its own skim-milk to produce different cell counts and ADV was determined after various time intervals at 4 and 37 °C. Lipolysis increased with increasing cell count, but a depression in lipolytic rate was noted after incubation for 6 h at 4 °C and 20 min at 37 °C.The proportion of skim-milk lipoprotein lipase activity in milk serum was larger both in milks possessing high cell counts and in normal milk adjusted to between 5 and 20 mM-NaCl by addition of solid NaCl. These levels of NaCl inhibited lipolysis.The possible direct and indirect effects of high cell count on milk lipolysis are discussed.

1982 ◽  
Vol 49 (2) ◽  
pp. 231-237 ◽  
Author(s):  
Malcolm Anderson

SUMMARYThe effects of temperature, dilution, dialysis and the presence of heparin on the stability of lipoprotein lipase (LPL) in milk, skim-milk, milk serum and casein micelles were investigated. At 4 and 20 °C milk serum was the source of the least stable LPL and casein was that of the most stable. There was little difference between LPL stability in milk and skim-milk at these temperatures, or between serum and casein LPL at 50 °C. Heparin (5 µg/ml) increased stability although the effect was less for casein LPL than for serum LPL. A 40-fold dilution of serum LPL with either simulated milk ultrafiltrate (SMUF) or 0·01 M-Tris-Cl pH 8·3 increased the loss of serum LPL, but not of casein LPL. Dialysis of skim-milk against deionized water or SMUF increased stability at 4 or 20 °C but not at 37 °C. LPL activity was more stable in diluted samples of dialysed skim-milk than in diluted samples of the same milk which had not been dialysed. Dialysis against deionized water increased lipolysis but against SMUF it did not increase. Solutions prepared by dialysing water against some milks were found to inhibit lipolysis and this effect was overcome by heparin. The possibility that milk serum contains a factor which influences LPL stability is discussed.


1981 ◽  
Vol 48 (2) ◽  
pp. 253-265 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolyn H. Fitz-Gerald ◽  
Hilton C. Deeth ◽  
Barry J. Kitchen

SummaryA large-scale survey of milks from healthy and mastitic bovine quarters was undertaken to establish the influence of mastitic infection on milk lipase activity and free fatty acid (FFA) level. Mastitic milks tended to have higher FFA levels, but lower lipoprotein lipase activities compared with milk from healthy quarters. These effects became significant at relatively severe levels of infection. The elevated FFA was attributable to higher FFA levels on secretion and to greater lipolysis during storage. Levels of carboxylesterase activity increased with severity of mastitis and showed high positive correlation with mastitis indices.Marked increases in carboxylesterase, N-acetyl-β-D-glucosaminidase and phospholipase occurred following the induction of mastitis by intramammary infusion of Escherichia, coli endotoxin, in parallel with changes in somatic cell count and other mastitis indices. Relatively little change in lipoprotein lipase activity was observed.


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