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AnSc419: Nonruminant section

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Title: AnSc419: Nonruminant section


1
AnSc419 Non-ruminant section
  • Dr. Nicholas Gabler
  • 201 Kildee Hall
  • Office phone (515) 294-7370
  • ngabler_at_iastate.edu

2
Nutrition
  • Provide animals with nutrients to enable them to
  • Optimize health, feed efficiency and profits
  • The digestive system is a portal for nutrients to
    gain access to the circulatory system
  • Food is broken down to very simple molecules such
    as sugars, amino acids, fatty acids, etc that
    are then transported across the GI tract lining
    into blood

3
Digestive anatomy and physiology
  • Carnivore Almost entirely on meat for food
  • Dog, Cats
  • Herbivore - Depends entirely on plant food
  • - Horses, Rabbits, Cattle, Sheep and Goats
  • Omnivore Both meat and plants for food
  • - Swine, Chickens, Humans

4
Animal Digestive Systems
  • Monogastrics Major Category
  • Simple Stomach Pigs, Humans, Dogs
  • Avian Chickens, Turkeys
  • Pseudo Ruminants (Hund gut caudal fermentors)
    Horses, Rabbits
  • Simple stomach, but very large and complex large
    intestine
  • Ruminants Cattle, Sheep, Goats
  • (Will by covered by Dr. Russell)
  • Affects nature of digestive processes and the
    kind of feed that can be utilized by the animal

5
Pig digestive tract
Adopted from Sisson 1975 Shummer et al., 1979
Moran 1982)
6
Dog and Cat digestive tract
Case 2003 2005
7
Poultry digestive tract
8
Specialized Poultry Organs
9
Horse digestive tract
10
Organs and Structures of the Digestive System
  • Mouth
  • Esophagus
  • Stomach
  • Liver
  • Pancreas
  • Small intestine
  • Large intestine

11
Mouth
  • Mechanical breakdown of foodstuffs
  • chewing
  • reduces particle size
  • increases surface area for action of enzymes
  • Saliva
  • Made of water with 1 of it being mucus,
    electrolytes and enzymes
  • Lubricant
  • Contains amylase to begin starch digestion in
    some species

12
Skull Dentition Variation

Dog/Pig
Rabbit/Horse
Cat
Dallas 2000
13
Esophagus
  • Short muscular tube leading from the mouth to the
    stomach
  • Moves food down the GI tract by peristaltic waves
  • Controlled by striated muscles (voluntary),
    smooth muscle (involuntary) and cholinergic
    nerves
  • Takes only a few seconds

14
Stomach
  • Initial digestion of food, broken to smaller
    particles
  • Foodstuffs reduced to liquid form
  • Enzymatic and chemical digestion of proteins
    begins
  • Four main regions
  • Cardia
  • Below the gastroesophageal sphincter
  • Receives swallowed food from the esophagus
  • Fundus
  • Adjacent or lateral to the cardia
  • Body
  • Large central region of the stomach
  • Main site of gastic juice production
  • Antrum (distal pyloric)
  • Grinds and mixes food with gastric juice
  • Provides peristalis for gastric emptying

15
Stomach cont
  • Gastric juices
  • Hydrochloric acid (HCl) breaking of bonds
  • Proteases proteins to polypeptides
  • Pepsin A
  • Pepsin B
  • Gastricsin
  • Chymosin
  • These proteases all secreted as zymogens that
    require a pH-dependent conformational change for
    their conversion into active enzymes

16
Stomach cont
  • Gastric Pits
  • Contain specialized cells that produce gastric
    juice
  • Gastric juice (pH 2)
  • Produced by three functionally different gastric
    glands found in the gastric mucosa and submucosa
    of the stomach

Gropper et al., 2005
17
Stomach cont
  • Gastric Pits cont
  • Several cell types secrete different substances
    within the pit
  • Neck (mucus) cells
  • Junction of stomach and esophagus
  • Parietal (oxyntic) cells
  • Body of stomach
  • Chief (peptic/zymogenic) cells
  • Enteroendocrine cells

Gropper et al., 2005
18
Stomach cont
  • Gastric Gland and secretion
  • Influenced by the amount of protein in a meal,
    meal volume, hormones that indirectly affect the
    acidity of the stomach
  • Adrenocorticotropic hormone ATCH ? HCl
    production
  • Secretin ? HCl via the release suppression of
    gastrin

19
Liver
  • Major role in digestive process is to provide
    bile salts to small intestine
  • Needed for digestion and absorption of fats
  • Bile
  • Stored in the gallbladder
  • Synthesized from cholesterol
  • The duodenum receives secretions from the
    gallbladder via the common duct
  • Fat digestion products are absorbed in the first
    100 cm of small intestine
  • The primary and secondary bile acids are
    reabsorbed almost exclusively in the ileum
    returning to the liver by way of the portal
    circulation (98 to 99)

20
Bile Acids
  • Cholic acid is the bile acid found in the largest
    amount in bile
  • Cholic acid and chenodeoxycholic acid are
    referred to as primary bile acids
  • Bile acids are converted to either glycine or
    taurine conjugates
  • Glycocholate 24
  • Glycochenodeoxycholate 24
  • Taurocholate 12
  • Taurochenodeoxycholate 12
  • Glycodeoxycholate- 16
  • Taurodeoxycholate 8
  • Various lithocholate 4

21
Pancreas
  • Provides a potent mixture of digestive enzymes to
    the small intestine
  • Helps in digestion of fats, carbohydrates, and
    proteins
  • Neutralizes the acidity of the chyme (gut
    contents) entering the duodenum
  • The pancreas releases its secretions into the
    pancreatic duct which then join the common duct
    and the duodenum
  • Enzymes include proteases, carbohydrases, lipases
    and nucleases

22
Pancreatic Enzymes
  • Lipase
  • Fats to fatty acids and glycerol
  • Trypsin
  • Polypeptides to peptides
  • Chymotrypsin
  • Peptides to amino acids
  • Amylase
  • Starch to disaccharides
  • Sucrase, Maltase, etc.
  • Disaccharides to monosaccharides

23
Small Intestine
  • Three sections duodenum, jejunum, ileum
  • Site of final stages of chemical enzymatic
    digestion
  • Where almost all nutrients are absorbed
  • Consists of four major layers
  • Mucosa
  • Submucosa
  • Musclaris
  • Serosa

24
Large Intestine
  • 3 sections Cecum, Colon, Rectum
  • Site of water absorption
  • Bacterial fermentation occurs (production and
    absorption of volatile fatty acids)
  • Somewhat limited in monogastrics
  • Feces formed.

25
Large Intestine cont
  • Cecum/Large Intestine
  • Limited plant fiber digestion
  • Microbes present produce the enzyme cellulase
  • Breaks down cellulose (one type of plant fiber)
  • Very inefficient system in monogastrics (except
    horses)

26
Specialized organs of Poultry
  • Beak
  • No lips, no teeth, and no chewing
  • Crop
  • Out-pocketing of the esophagus that provides
    storage for consumed food
  • Foodstuffs moistened and softened
  • Little digestion occurs

27
Specialized organs of Poultry cont
  • Proventriculus (true stomach)
  • Glandular stomach where the first significant
    amount of digestive juices are added
  • Gizzard
  • A muscular organ used to grind and break up food
  • May contain grit (small stones) eaten by animal
  • Cloaca
  • Common chamber into which the digestive, urinary,
    and reproductive tracts open
  • When fecal material is excreted, the cloaca folds
    back at the vent allowing the rectal opening of
    the large intestine to push out, closing the
    reproductive tract opening

28
Specialized organs of hindgut fermentors (Horses)
  • The mouth to the small intestine have similar
    functions as compared to other monogastrics
  • However
  • Large Intestine is a major difference between
    monogastrics and hind gut fermentors
  • Large intestine (Cecum) is exceptionally large
    and complex compared to monogastrics and ruminants

29
Specialized organs of hindgut fermentors (Horses)
  • Cecum function
  • Microbes present break down the plant fiber
  • Produce energy to be absorbed through the cecum
    as VFAs
  • Synthesize more microbes, vitamins and amino
    acids
  • Less efficient than rumen since cecum is
    downstream of digestive organs (stomach and small
    intestine)
  • Require higher quality feed and forage than
    ruminants

30
Digestive System Comparisons
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