March 18, 2026

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Keeping the informed and scientific beat on amino acid and fatty acid nutrition for dairy cattle.

A Perspective on Histidine Supplementation: Lactational Performance

As dairy nutritionists look to reduce dietary crude protein to improve nitrogen efficiency, sustainability, and feed costs, focusing on supplying adequate amounts of digestible essential amino acids has become increasingly more important. Among these essential amino acids, histidine has been identified as a limiting nutrient for milk and milk protein synthesis, especially in low-protein, microbial protein-reliant diets.

Recent work analyzing more than two decades of research has reinforced the role of histidine as an essential amino acid for dairy cattle. In a comprehensive meta-analysis of 22 controlled studies, Räisänen et al. (2023) evaluated the effects of supplemental histidine on lactational performance, plasma histidine concentration, and the efficiency of histidine utilization in dairy cows. The analysis integrated studies using rumen-protected histidine, abomasal infusion, jugular infusion, and histidine-deletion infusion models across a range of diet types and production levels.

Despite differences in methodology, basal ration, and stage of lactation, a clear and consistent outcome emerged: histidine supplementation significantly increased dry matter intake, milk yield, and milk true protein concentration and yield (Figure 1; Table 1). These responses were accompanied by a marked increase in circulating plasma histidine, demonstrating successful delivery of the amino acid to post-ruminal absorption sites and ultimately to the mammary gland. The response to histidine was most pronounced when diets were deficient in metabolizable protein.

Table 1. Effect size1 and heterogeneity for the effect of His supplementation on lactational performance of dairy cows.


SUMMARY:

  • Histidine supplementation significantly increased dry matter intake, milk yield, and milk true protein yield and concentration.
  • The positive effects of histidine supplementation were more pronounced in cows fed MP deficient diets, confirming it as a limiting amino acid under low protein conditions.
  • Production responses to histidine follow a nonlinear logistic pattern, in which initial increments in histidine supply generate large improvements in feed intake and protein yield, followed by diminishing marginal returns once adequate supply is met.
  • Efficiency of digestible histidine use decreased as the ratio of digestible histidine to energy supply increased, indicating that histidine utilization depends on adequate energy balance.
  • Histidine, alongside methionine and lysine, should be considered in amino acid balanced rations to optimize milk protein synthesis, production efficiency, and environmental sustainability in dairy systems.