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Animal Science 233 Applied Animal Nutrition

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Animal Science 233. Applied Animal Nutrition. Protein Systems. Protein Terminology. Bioavailability: the degree to which an ingested nutrient is absorbed in a form ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Animal Science 233 Applied Animal Nutrition


1
Animal Science 233Applied Animal Nutrition
  • Protein Systems

2
Protein Terminology
  • Bioavailability the degree to which an ingested
    nutrient is absorbed in a form that can be
    utilized
  • Includes
  • Digestion
  • Absorption
  • Utilization

3
Protein Terminology
  • True protein protein composed only of AA
  • Nonprotein nitrogen (NPN) compounds that contain
    N and can be converted to protein by bacterial
    action by RUMINANTS
  • e.g. urea

4
Protein Terminology
  • Crude protein (total protein) protein composed
    of true protein and any other N compounds
  • Rememberdetermined by Kjehdahl
  • CP N 6.25
  • Feed contains 7 N so has 7 6.25 43.75
    CP
  • OK estimate if no NPN sources used

5
Protein Terminology
  • Digestible protein the portion of CP which the
    animal can digest
  • Difference between the amount in the feed and the
    amount in the feces
  • If feeding 100 g of CP from Distillers Dried
    Grains and get 15 g CP in manure, then DDG is 85
    digestible

6
Protein Terminology
  • Metabolizable protein Protein that is absorbed
    by the animal and utilized for growth and
    maintenance
  • Protein used for function
  • Digested ? Utilized

7
Review of Protein Metabolism
  • Animals do not have a protein requirement, but a
    nitrogen requirement in the form of amino acids.
  • Ratio of Essential aas-to-Non-Essential aas
  • The animal consumes proteins, which are complexes
    of amino acids in the form of folded peptides.

8
Review of Protein Metabolism
9
Review of Protein Metabolism
  • The proteins are denatured by the stomach acids
    (HCl).
  • Bonds are broken that allow the structure to
    unfold
  • This unfolding is crucial in the absorption of
    the proteins

10
Review of Protein Metabolism
  • The unfolding of the protein allows enzymes to
    bind with active sites of the protein
  • Activates the enzymes
  • The enzymes can now cleave (cut) the protein into
    peptides and amino acids
  • Which can be absorbed across the gut epithelium

11
Review of Protein Metabolism
  • Fate of absorbed amino acids
  • Cells of the body incorporate the aas into
    tissue or utilize for protein synthesis
  • Muscles
  • Organs
  • Enzymes
  • Used as a fuel source after glucose levels
    decline
  • Approx. 1-2 hours after a meal

12
Review of Protein Metabolism
  • AA imbalance
  • If the ratio (essential-to-nonessential) is
    imbalanced, then aas will not be incorporated
    into tissues or used for protein synthesis and
    will be burned as energy or accumulate in the
    blood

13
Review of Protein Metabolism
  • AA imbalance
  • Burning of aas by the liver 6 of daily
    maintenance energy
  • Production of N products - Urea Cycle
  • The accumulation of amino acids in the blood will
    also decrease intake
  • Triggering hormones and satiety receptors
  • Performance begins to drop off

14
Protein Quality
  • Definition balance of bioavailable AA in a feed
    ingredient relative to animals AA requirement
  • Changes in protein structure will change protein
    structure and availability, not presence of N

15
Protein Quality
  • How is it possible to change protein structure
    and thus quality?
  • Denaturation
  • Loss of structure and biological activity
  • Heat, UV light, acids, alkali, organic solvents

16
Protein Quality
  • How is it possible to change protein structure
    and thus quality?
  • Maillard Reaction (Browning Reaction)
  • Caused by excess heat cooking, drying, improper
    storage
  • Protein-CHO complex formed
  • Protein is still there, just unavailable to
    animal

17
Maillard Reaction
HCO CHOH CHOH
18
Maillard Reaction
19
Protein Quality
  • How is it possible determine protein quality?
  • Biological Value (BV) measure of amount of true
    protein absorbed from the intestinal tract and
    how well the digestive system converts it into AA
  • Higher for animal protein than plant protein

20
Protein Quality
  • How is it possible determine protein quality?
  • Biological Value
  • Efficiency with which a protein furnishes the
    required amounts of essential amino acids needed
    for productive body functions
  • Used to index or rank protein quality
  • Expressed as

21
Protein Quality
  • How is it possible determine protein quality?
  • Biological Value
  • N intake (Urinary N Fecal N)

BV
100
N intake Fecal N
22
Biological Value
  • Biological Value
  • Egg Protein (albumin) ? Highest BV (97)
  • Animal Origin 60 - 80
  • Plant Origin 40 - 80
  • FYI BV are indexed against albumin to rate
    protein quality
  • BVs gt 70 are capable of supporting growth
  • Assuming E is in adequate proportion
  • Mixing low BV proteins with higher BV proteins
    may enhance the use of low BV proteins

23
Protein Quality
  • Other methods for determining protein quality
  • Net Protein Utilization Measures the efficiency
    of growth by comparing body N content resulting
    from feeding a test protein to the body N content
    of animals consuming a protein-free diet for the
    same length of time

24
Net Protein Utilization
  • Advantages Large number of values can be
    obtained over short period of time
  • Disadvantages Normal animal function is
    compromised
  • Limited use on this type of study

25
Protein Quality
  • Other methods for determining protein quality
  • Protein Efficiency Ratio (PER) Feeding trial in
    which protein sources are compared in terms of
    gain in body weight per gram of protein or N fed

26
Monogastric Protein Systems
27
Monogastric Protein Systems
  • Swine poultry industries have done away with
    the crude protein system. Research in their
    respective industries have focused on amino acid
    requirements
  • Most swine and poultry diet requirements were
    based on corn soybean meal diets
  • Limiting AAs Lysine (1st), Methionine,
    Tryptophan

28
Monogastric Protein Systems
  • Limiting AA The essential amino acid that is
    present in the lowest quantity in the diet when
    expressed as a percentage of the animals amino
    acid requirement
  • Lysine, Methionine, Tryptophan

29
Monogastric Protein Systems
  • First Limiting AA concept
  • Current protein system focuses on meeting the
    animals need for lysine (or methionine in
    poultry)
  • Based on Corn/Soybean meal diets
  • Other amino acid requirements should be satisfied
    once the 1st limiting amino acid is met

30
Monogastric Protein Systems
  • Ideal AA concept Provide a perfect pattern or
    balance of essential nonessential amino acids
    in the diet without any excesses or deficiencies

Chung and Baker, 1992
31
Ideal AA concept
  • Basis of derivation of ratios (ideal concept)
  • Growth studies
  • Whole body AA profile
  • Ratios differ for growth vs. maintenance

32
Ideal AA concept
  • Ratios for Pigs

33
Ideal AA concept
  • Ratios for Pigs
  • Increase proportion of total AA required as
    animals increase in age
  • BOTTOM LINE Different ratios at different
    ages/stages of production

34
Ideal AA concept
  • How do we meet those individual amino acid
    requirements?
  • 1. Use complimentary protein sources
  • Corn and SBM
  • 2. Use crystalline amino acids
  • Lysine, Methionine, etc.

35
Ideal AA concept
  • Advantages/Applications
  • Simplifies feed formulation
  • Helps in formulating for improved AA balance
  • Decrease N excretion
  • Improved efficiency of growth
  • Improved energy efficiency
  • AA used inefficiently as an energy source

36
Ideal AA concept
  • Producers need to concentrate on systems that
    keep excessive N excretions low, but still
    maintain low costs of gain

37
Ideal AA concept
  • When do crystalline forms of amino acids come
    into play?
  • When it becomes economically sound to replace
    grain supplemental protein sources with
    crystalline forms
  • Lysine (L-Lysine HCl)
  • Methionine
  • Need to monitor all other amino acid
    requirements, because limitations
    (deficiencies/imbalances) can show up depending
    on type of feed being supplied

38
Digestible AA
  • Swine NRC represents AA requirements on a
    digestible and total basis
  • Total requirement on as is basis or total
    amount that must be there to meet needs
  • Digestible amount that is digestible required
    to meet needs
  • More refined basis for determining requirements

39
Apparent digestibility of AA in some common swine
protein sources
40
Ruminant Protein Systems
41
Ruminant Protein Systems
  • Rumen fermentation puts a twist on providing
    protein to the animal
  • Microbial requirement
  • Animal requirement
  • For a long time it was thought that all protein
    leaving the rumen was of good quality adequate
    to meet the essential amino acid requirements of
    the animal

42
Ruminant Protein Systems
  • DIP - Degradable Intake Protein
  • Degraded in the rumen
  • UIP - Undegradable Intake Protein
  • Escape - Not degraded in the rumen
  • usually called bypass or escape protein
  • 2 factors that have the largest impact on protein
    degradability
  • 1. Enzyme kinetics (protease activity)
  • 2. Passage rate

43
Salivary Gland
Bact. Undeg Prot.
Prot.
AAs
Undig prot.
Feces
Kidneys
Bladder
Rumen
Abomasum
Urine
Liver
Bacteria
Feed Protein
Blood pool
UIP
ENERGY
Urea
NPN
NH3
True protein
Amino acids
DIP
Amino acids
NPN
Body tissue
Milk protein
44
Metabolizable Protein System
  • Quantity of protein digested or amino acid(s)
    absorbed in the post-ruminal portion of the
    digestive tract of ruminants
  • a.k.a. apparent digestible protein in
    monogastrics
  • Quantity / Quality of protein flowing out of the
    rumen
  • Evaluates UIP outflow (escape value)
  • Degraded dietary protein used in the synthesis of
    microbial protein (BCP)
  • Both sources (UIP BCP) are considered amino
    acid sources for the animal

45
Metabolizable Protein System
  • Does a better job at predicting protein needs of
    cattle
  • vs. CP levels where many nitrogen sources are
    unavailable to the animal
  • Couples ruminal degradation of dietary protein
    with maximal protein synthesis rate of microbes
    based on dietary energy level

46
Bacterial Crude Protein (BCP)
  • Dead or dying microbes from the rumen
  • Broken down by digestive enzymes and secretions
  • Absorbed in the small intestine
  • Supply 50 - 100 of the MP required by beef
    cattle, depending on UIP source
  • BCP synthesis can be slowed by
  • 1. High, readily-fermentable grain diets
  • Due to low pH
  • 2. Low quality forage diets
  • Inadequate energy to sustain growth

47
Ruminant Protein Systems
  • Nonprotein nitrogen (NPN) compounds that contain
    N and can be converted to protein by bacterial
    action by RUMINANTS
  • e.g. urea

48
Non-protein Nitrogen (NPN)
  • Main source UREA (also biuret, triuret)
  • Used only to supply N to microbes
  • Microbes have an enzyme called urease which
    breaks the molecule into primarily NH3
  • Mammals do not have this enzyme
  • NH3 is then incorporated into bacterial growth,
    as long as energy is sufficient
  • Excess NH3 is absorbed across the rumen wall into
    the animals blood system.
  • NH3 is extremely toxic to mammals

49
NPN
  • The liver then converts the NH3 to urea and
    releases it back into the blood
  • Fate of urea
  • Recycled back to the rumen
  • Microbes get second chance at the nitrogen
  • Via ruminal epithelium
  • Via the saliva
  • Excreted via urine
  • Excess NH3 can result in toxic shock to the
    system
  • Liver cant keep up
  • Urea toxicity
  • Vinegar drench

50
Undegradable Intake Protein (UIP)
  • Escapes microbial breakdown in the rumen
  • Provides a source of unaltered amino acids to
    the animal
  • Possibly greater in quality and quantity versus
    BCP
  • Methods of increasing escape value of protein
    sources
  • Heat treatment
  • Treatment with formaldehyde or tannins
  • Encapsulation of amino acids
  • Use of amino acid analogs
  • Control of microbial metabolism in the rumen

51
High escape value does not necessarily mean
improved animal performance
  • Escape (By-pass) protein may be poorly digested
    in the small intestine
  • Balance of amino acids in postruminal protein may
    be out of whack
  • Increased non-essential AAs
  • Foul up the transport mechanisms
  • Energy supply or nutrients other than amino acids
    may limit animal performance

52
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53
Ruminal Degradability of Plant Protein Sources
vs. Urea
54
Animal Protein Sources
  • Excellent source of essential amino acids
  • Especially for non-ruminant animals
  • Can not be used in Ruminant diets
  • BSE
  • Consumer perception
  • Not palatable to animals
  • Especially blood and meat meal

55
Animal Protein Sources
  • Indigestible components
  • Keratin, bone, connective tissue
  • By-products can be extremely high in certain
    minerals
  • Ca, P, S

56
Protein Digestion in Ruminants
  • Neonatal ? 4 - 6 weeks of age
  • Rumen has not developed
  • Essentially a monogastric system
  • Milk / Milk Replacer
  • 6 weeks ? 8 weeks of age
  • Functioning rumen (consuming solid foods milk)
  • Need to satisfy both the rumen environment and
    the growing animal
  • Natural proteins preferred
  • Microbial population in not adequate to utilize
    NPN

57
Protein Digestion in Ruminants
  • 8 weeks
  • Functioning ruminant digestive tract
  • Utilize natural and NPN sources of nitrogen

58
Protein Feedstuffs
  • Sources and their value in rations

59
Protein Feedstuffs--Roughages
60
Protein Feedstuffs--Concentrates
61
Protein Feedstuffs--Byproducts
62
Protein FeedstuffsAnimal protein sources
63
Protein FeedstuffsMisc. protein sources
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