Microscopy and protein solubilization of digesta from pigs fed wheat, corn, or soybean meal-based diets, with or without protease and a Bacillus spp. direct-fed microbial
Autor: | Hans H Stein, Maria Walsh, Susan Lund Arent, L. Payling, L. F. Romero, Mogens Nielsen, Tofuko A Woyengo |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
0303 health sciences
Meal animal structures Protease 030309 nutrition & dietetics Chemistry medicine.medical_treatment Soybean meal 0402 animal and dairy science food and beverages 04 agricultural and veterinary sciences 040201 dairy & animal science 03 medical and health sciences Hydrolysis Latin square medicine Animal Science and Zoology Centrifugation Food science Animal nutrition Mode of action |
Zdroj: | Animal Feed Science and Technology. 247:183-193 |
ISSN: | 0377-8401 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.anifeedsci.2018.11.013 |
Popis: | Two types of microscopy were used to visualize the microstructure of ileal digesta from grower-pigs fed corn, wheat or SBM (soybean meal)-based diets. Digesta were incubated with a Bacillus spp. DFM (direct-fed microbial) and a protease. Microscopy images were taken before and after the incubations. A protein solubilization assay was performed to provide supporting quantitative data. The aim was to visualize differences between the undigested fractions of the different ingredients, and observe whether a protease and DFM combination could increase degradation of this fraction. Ileal digesta was obtained on d 5–7 from one pig fed diets based on corn, wheat or SBM from a study where eight ileal cannulated barrows (30 kg) were fed a total of 8 different diets for 7 d in an 8 × 8 Latin Square design. Digesta samples were incubated with no additive (control), DFM (3.3 × 105 cfu/g digesta), protease (11 U/g digesta), or DFM + protease. The supernatant and pellet were separated by centrifugation and used to observe internal and external microstructure and quantify protein solubilization. In images from confocal laser scanning microscopy and scanning electron microscopy, it appeared that there were differences in nutrient structure of the ingredients and the digesta. Wheat and corn appeared to have many protein-starch interactions whilst SBM had mostly protein-fiber interactions. The microscopy indicated that the protease and DFM had a complementary effect in degrading the fiber-protein complexes in the SBM-based digesta, which was supported by an increase in protein solubilization with the additive combination compared to the control (1635 vs. 730 ng/μL; P = 0.02). This may be due to a complementary mode of action involving hydrolysis of proteins by protease giving increased access to fiber substrates for DFM secreted enzymes to act upon. However, the additives had no effect on protein solubilzation from wheat and corn-based digesta (wheat; 2022 vs. 1063 ng/μL; P = 0.44, corn; 1162 vs. 854 ng/μL; P = 0.73), and it is not possible to conclude the efficacy or mode of action of the additives in wheat and corn from qualitative microscopy images alone. The results illustrate key differences in the structures and undigested substrates of the ingredients, and mode of action for the combination of protease and DFM in SBM-based digesta, supporting previously published in vivo data. Further investigation is required to validate the in vitro efficacy and mode of action of the feed additives on wheat and corn-based digesta. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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