Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1

Fermentative catabolism (FAAC) of dietary and endogenous amino acids (AA) in the small intestine contributes to loss of AA available for protein synthesis and body maintenance functions in pigs. A continuous isotope infusion study was performed to determine whole body urea flux, urea recycling and F...

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Main Authors: D.A. Columbus, J.P. Cant, C.F.M. de Lange
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-01-01
Series:Animal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731115001238
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spelling doaj-66f58cb76ff540dfa45f3ec2ac83924d2021-06-06T04:51:17ZengElsevierAnimal1751-73112015-01-0191117691777Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1D.A. Columbus0J.P. Cant1C.F.M. de Lange2Department of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, CanadaDepartment of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, CanadaDepartment of Animal and Poultry Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, CanadaFermentative catabolism (FAAC) of dietary and endogenous amino acids (AA) in the small intestine contributes to loss of AA available for protein synthesis and body maintenance functions in pigs. A continuous isotope infusion study was performed to determine whole body urea flux, urea recycling and FAAC in the small intestine of ileal-cannulated growing pigs fed a control diet (CON, 18.6% CP; n=6), a high fibre diet with 12% added pectin (HF, 17.7% CP; n=4) or a low-protein diet (LP, 13.4% CP; n=6). 15N-ammonium chloride and 13C-urea were infused intragastrically and intravenously, respectively, for 4 days. Recovery of ammonia at the distal ileum was increased by feeding additional fibre when compared with the CON (P<0.05) but was not affected by dietary protein (0.24, 0.39 and 0.14 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day for CON, HF and LP, respectively; P<0.05). Lowering protein intake reduced urea flux (25.3, 25.7 and 10.3 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day; P<0.01), urinary urea excretion (14.4, 15.0 and 6.2 mmol N/kg BW/day; P<0.001) and urea recycling (12.1, 11.3 and 3.23 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day; P<0.01) compared with CON. There was a rapid reduction in 15N-ammonia enrichment in digesta along the small intestine suggesting rapid absorption of ammonia before the distal ileum and lack of uniformity of enrichment in the digesta ammonia pool. A two-pool model was developed to determine possible value ranges for nitrogen flux in the small intestine assuming rapid absorption of ammonia. Maximum estimated FAAC based on this model was significantly lower when dietary protein content was decreased (32.9, 33.4 and 17.4 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day; P<0.001). There was no impact of dietary fibre on estimates of small intestine nitrogen flux (P>0.05) compared with CON. The two-pool model developed in the present study allows for estimation of FAAC but still has limitations. Quantifying FAAC in the small intestine of pigs, as well as other non-ruminants and humans, offers a number of challenges but warrants further investigation.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731115001238amino acidsfermentative catabolismfibregrowing pigs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D.A. Columbus
J.P. Cant
C.F.M. de Lange
spellingShingle D.A. Columbus
J.P. Cant
C.F.M. de Lange
Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
Animal
amino acids
fermentative catabolism
fibre
growing pigs
author_facet D.A. Columbus
J.P. Cant
C.F.M. de Lange
author_sort D.A. Columbus
title Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
title_short Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
title_full Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
title_fullStr Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
title_full_unstemmed Estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
title_sort estimating fermentative amino acid catabolism in the small intestine of growing pigs1
publisher Elsevier
series Animal
issn 1751-7311
publishDate 2015-01-01
description Fermentative catabolism (FAAC) of dietary and endogenous amino acids (AA) in the small intestine contributes to loss of AA available for protein synthesis and body maintenance functions in pigs. A continuous isotope infusion study was performed to determine whole body urea flux, urea recycling and FAAC in the small intestine of ileal-cannulated growing pigs fed a control diet (CON, 18.6% CP; n=6), a high fibre diet with 12% added pectin (HF, 17.7% CP; n=4) or a low-protein diet (LP, 13.4% CP; n=6). 15N-ammonium chloride and 13C-urea were infused intragastrically and intravenously, respectively, for 4 days. Recovery of ammonia at the distal ileum was increased by feeding additional fibre when compared with the CON (P<0.05) but was not affected by dietary protein (0.24, 0.39 and 0.14 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day for CON, HF and LP, respectively; P<0.05). Lowering protein intake reduced urea flux (25.3, 25.7 and 10.3 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day; P<0.01), urinary urea excretion (14.4, 15.0 and 6.2 mmol N/kg BW/day; P<0.001) and urea recycling (12.1, 11.3 and 3.23 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day; P<0.01) compared with CON. There was a rapid reduction in 15N-ammonia enrichment in digesta along the small intestine suggesting rapid absorption of ammonia before the distal ileum and lack of uniformity of enrichment in the digesta ammonia pool. A two-pool model was developed to determine possible value ranges for nitrogen flux in the small intestine assuming rapid absorption of ammonia. Maximum estimated FAAC based on this model was significantly lower when dietary protein content was decreased (32.9, 33.4 and 17.4 mmol nitrogen/kg BW/day; P<0.001). There was no impact of dietary fibre on estimates of small intestine nitrogen flux (P>0.05) compared with CON. The two-pool model developed in the present study allows for estimation of FAAC but still has limitations. Quantifying FAAC in the small intestine of pigs, as well as other non-ruminants and humans, offers a number of challenges but warrants further investigation.
topic amino acids
fermentative catabolism
fibre
growing pigs
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1751731115001238
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