2007
DOI: 10.1017/s1751731107000249
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Stress neuroendocrine profiles in five pig breeding lines and the relationship with carcass composition

Abstract: Stress neuroendocrine systems (hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and sympathetic nervous system) were studied in 100 female pigs from each of the five main genetic lines used in Europe for pork production: Pié train, Large White, Landrace, Duroc and Meishan. Levels of cortisol and catecholamines were measured in urine collected at the farm, after transportation to the slaughterhouse and the next morning before slaughter. With the exception of the Pié train line that showed intermediate levels of cortisol des… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Indeed, the functional variability of the HPA axis is usually very large, even in genetically homogeneous populations. Foury et al (2007) found a 30-fold range of urine cortisol concentrations in each of five pure pig lines, much more than the variation of production traits. In the above-mentioned study of genetic trends of stress-responsive systems in the French Large White, (Foury et al, 2009) found a 20.27 correlation between cortisol levels (in urine collected from the bladder after slaughter) and carcass lean content, so that only 0.27 3 0.27 5 7.3% of the variance of leanness is related to differences in cortisol production.…”
Section: Cortisol: Trade-off Factor Between Production and Robustnessmentioning
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Indeed, the functional variability of the HPA axis is usually very large, even in genetically homogeneous populations. Foury et al (2007) found a 30-fold range of urine cortisol concentrations in each of five pure pig lines, much more than the variation of production traits. In the above-mentioned study of genetic trends of stress-responsive systems in the French Large White, (Foury et al, 2009) found a 20.27 correlation between cortisol levels (in urine collected from the bladder after slaughter) and carcass lean content, so that only 0.27 3 0.27 5 7.3% of the variance of leanness is related to differences in cortisol production.…”
Section: Cortisol: Trade-off Factor Between Production and Robustnessmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…Pig populations show much functional variation (e.g. Foury et al, 2007)) and divergent genetic selection for the HPA axis response to various stimuli has been successful in a wide range of species: trout (confinement stress: (Fevolden et al, 1999;Pottinger and Carrick, 1999), chickens (adrenal response to ACTH: (Edens and Siegel, 1975); social stress: (Gross and Siegel, 1985), turkeys (cold stress: (Brown and Nestor, 1973), Japanese quail (immobilization stress: (Satterlee and Johnson, 1988) and mice (restraint stress: (Touma et al, 2008). The response to selection is usually very strong, with realized heritability between 0.4 and 0.5.…”
Section: Genetics and The Hpa Axismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Production parameters of weight gain, food conversion efficiency and back fat were recorded as a strong link between chronic stress and poor growth performance is frequently observed (e.g. Hyun et al, 1998;Sutherland et al, 2006;Foury et al, 2007). One of the key causal mechanisms of this relationship is thought to be the general catabolic influence of high circulating cortisol on certain muscle types and fat cells (Sapolsky et al, 2000;Yoshioka et al, 2005).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This example raises the question of the balance between ethical and economical aspects of genetic selection and illustrates the resistance to implement scientific knowledge that is not directly related to production traits. However, it is worth noting that even noncarrying Pietrain pigs show a peculiar muscle weakness manifested by increased plasma concentrations of creatine kinase, typical of a myopathic condition (Foury et al, 2007), and a large proportion of these animals are also halothane sensitive. It is not established whether this condition is painful by itself, but it may increase stress-induced physical discomfort in the animals (Allison et al, 2005 and.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%