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Japanese Black cattle (Wagyu) are raised under a distinctive long-term fattening system designed to enhance intramuscular fat (marbling) and carcass value. Because most metabolizable energy and many metabolic signals in ruminants derive from rumen fermentation products, variation in rumen microbial ecology and fermentation chemistry can extend to systemic metabolism and ultimately influence meat quality traits. Recent work in Japanese Black steers has provided a structured, multi-layered dataset spanning rumen fermentation characteristics, blood metabolites and hormones, liver transcriptome profiles, and rumen microbiome composition and predicted function across fattening stages and metabolic phenotypes. This review integrates these findings with established concepts in ruminant physiology to propose a physio-informatic framework linking rumen microbiota to hepatic metabolic regulation and adipose tissue development via the rumen–liver–adipose axis, with potential relevance to broader meat quality traits. We highlight (i) microbial succession across the three-stage feeding program, (ii) fermentation-derived short-chain fatty acids and their absorption and metabolic fates, and (iii) endocrine and transcriptional regulation of energy partitioning during fattening as an interpretable systems signal rather than a single downstream endpoint. Finally, we discuss potential analytic strategies, including longitudinal modeling, network inference, and machine learning approaches, that may support the future development of predictive biomarkers of carcass traits and intervention strategies potentially applicable to improving marbling consistency and metabolic efficiency.
Lee et al. (Fri,) studied this question.