1 / 36

Hydroxy Methylthio Butyrate HMB (“N-Free” Met)

Hydroxy Methylthio Butyrate HMB (“N-Free” Met). 1. Ca Salt of HMB: a. Chandler et al. (1976): Increased Milk Fat Yield. b. Jones et al. (1988): 99% Degraded in the Rumen. c. Hosogai et al. (1989): Increased Blood Met. 2. Liquid Form of HMB (Alimet):

Download Presentation

Hydroxy Methylthio Butyrate HMB (“N-Free” Met)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hydroxy Methylthio Butyrate HMB (“N-Free” Met) • 1. Ca Salt of HMB: • a. Chandler et al. (1976): Increased Milk Fat Yield. • b. Jones et al. (1988): 99% Degraded in the Rumen. • c. Hosogai et al. (1989): Increased Blood Met. • 2. Liquid Form of HMB (Alimet): • a. Stephenson et al. (1990): Basal Wool Growth Increased w/ Drench (~25% of Increase Obtained w/ Abomasal HMB). • b. Sklan & Tinksy (1996): RP-HMB Increased • Milk Yield on “Met-Limited” Diet. • c. Koenig et al. (1999): 50% Rumen Escaped of HMB. • d. McCollum et al. (2000): Direct Uptake in Stomach (?). • 3. Isopropyl-HMB: • a. Robert et al. (2001): 50% Escaped the Rumen. • b. St-Pierre & Sylvester (2005): Increased Milk, Fat & Protein. • c. Chen et al. (2009): HMBi Utilization ~= SmartAmine RPM. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  2. Intestinal Protein Digestion & Amino Acid Utilization in the Ruminant Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  3. Intestinal Protein Digestion • The “Black Hole” of Ruminant Protein Nutrition. • Of Considerable Practical Importance. • Red Clover • Rumen-Protected Proteins • Measurement of Intestinal Protein Digestion. • Mobile Bag Technique • Pepsin-Pancreatin In Vitro Techniques • Dual-Cannulation of Intestine (Proximal Duodenum & Terminal Ileum) • Maintaining Dual Intestinally Cannulated Animals is Problematic. • “Good” Data are Badly Needed. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  4. Utilization of Red Clover CP • NPN in Red Clover Silage Markedly Lower than Grass or Alfalfa Silages • Reduced Proteolysis in Silo due to Polyphenol Oxidase (PPO) Activity in Red Clover Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  5. Efficiency of N Utilization of RC and grass silages in the Rumen(Data from Finnish (MTT) omasal sampling studies) • Ruminal N-Efficiency of Red Clover Better than Grass Silages • Zero N balance at 168 g vs. 136 g CP/kg DM • Lower Ruminal Ammonia at Same Dietary CP Content • Reduced Protein Degradation • Improved Microbial Synthesis Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  6. Replacing Grass Silage with Red Clover Silage & NAN Flow and Protein Yield • Increased N Intake with Replacement of Grass by Red Clover Increased NAN Flow • But Increased Protein Flow Did Not Increase Milk Protein Yield • WHY? Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  7. Fecal CP higher for RC (MTT data) • Intercept of Lucas Test More Negative for Red Clover (RC) vs. Perenial Rye Grass (PG grass); • Fecal CP/kg DMI ~16 g Higher (RC) • “CP Digestibility Lower for RC” • (Pekka Huhtanen) • or • Impaired Utilization of Absorbed AA • (Glen Broderick) • PPO Depresses Protein Utilization as well as Rumen Degradation Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  8. Autoclaving Time on True Digestibility (Rat) & FDNB-Available Lys in Cottonseed Meal(Craig & Broderick, 1981) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  9. Rat Growth as Function of Intake of FDNB-Lys or Truly Dig. Protein in Autoclaved CSM(Craig & Broderick, 1981) Filled = Autoclaved 30 to 60 min. Filled = Autoclaved 0 to 30 min. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  10. Mobile Bag Technique In Situ Bags Inserted into Duodenum; Recovered at Terminal Ileum or in Feces. May Use Ruminal Pre-Incubations. Should Use an Acid-Pepsin Pre-Incubations. Nitrogen or AA Disappearance Designated as “Intestinal Digestibility”. Often Intestinal Digestibilities are > 95%. Recovering Mobile Bags in Feces May Confound Over-Estimates of Intestinal Digestibility. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  11. Pepsin-Pancreatin In Vitro Method • Protein Exposed to Pepsin/HCl (pH 2). • pH Adjusted to 7.5. • Incubated with Mixed Pancreatic Enzymes. • Method very OLD: • Akeson & Stahmann (1964) • Craig & Broderick (1981) • Calsamiglia & Stern (1995) • In Vivo Proximal Duodenal to Terminal Ileal Digestion Remains a “Standard” (NOT = Availability). Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  12. Calsamiglia & Stern (1995) 3-Step In Vitro Method • In Situ Pre-Incubation Protein in the Rumen (16-h). • Mimic Escaped Protein (Assume Little Microbial Contamination) • Not a Measure of Protein Escape (also ftn of kd) • Protein Exposed to Pepsin/0.1 N HCl (1-h). • pH Adjusted to 7.6 & Incubated with Mixed Pancreatic Enzymes (24-h). 4. Has Shown Lower Digestibilities than Mobile Bag. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  13. Effect of Method on Digestibility Estimated for Soybean Meals(Stern et al., 1997) • Mobile Bag Tech. 3-Step Technique • Phase Solv. SBM LS-SBM Solv. SBM LS-SBM • (CP Digestion, %) • Ruminal 73.1a 29.1b 80.6a 31.3b • Intestinal 99.3a 99.5a 77.6b 77.9b • Overall 99.8a 99.9a 95.9b 85.1c a-c(P < 0.05) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  14. Digestible Lys vs. Bio-Available Lys & Lys Deposition in Growing Pigs(Rutherfurd et al., 1997) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  15. Main References • Lapierre et al. 2005. The route of absorbed nitrogen into milk protein. Anim. Sci. 80:11-22. • Lobley. 2002. Protein turnover - What does it mean for animal production. CSAS Symp., 1-15. 3. J. P. Cant et al. 2002. Responses of the bovine mammary glands to absorptive supply of single amino acids. CSAS Symp., 27-43. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  16. Protein Metabolism in the Cow’s Tissues Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  17. Whole Body N Metabolism in the Lactating Dairy Cow (Lapierre et al., 2005) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  18. Amino Acid Metabolism in Tissues of the Lactating Dairy Cow(Lapierre et al., 2005) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  19. EAA Uptake vs. Metabolism in the Lactating Cow • Amino acid His Leu Lys Met Phe Thr • Function • (g/day) • Absorbed 37 117 108 32 85 63 • Post-Liver 26 140 111 22 44 57 • Mammary • Uptake 23 101 88 24 43 40 • Milk Protein 22 82 68 23 42 37 • Milk/Post-Liver 0.82 a 0.58 0.61 1.01a 0.94a 0.64 (aNot different from 1.0) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  20. EAA Absorption & Portal Appearance Blood vs. Presence in Body Protein (% of Ile, Leu, Lys, Phe, Thr + Val) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  21. Ratio Appearance of EAA--Portal Drained Viscera (PDV) to Mesenteric Drained Viscera (MDV) a b bc c d e Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  22. Oxidation of EAA Across the Sheep GIT • Item Leucine Lysine Methionine Phenylalanine • GIT Oxidation 57.2a 1.1 7.6a -2.8 • (µmol/h) • % Whole Body 26.5a -1.0 9.9a -4.3 • Oxidation • % of Apparent 36.0a . . . 15.3a . . . • Uptake (aDifferent from 0) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  23. Gut Amino Acid Metabolism • 1. Non-Essential Amino Acids (Glu & Gln--Major Energy Sources, Nucleic Acids Synthesis) • 2. Essential Amino Acids • a. Catabolism of Some EAA Related to Intake (Lys) • b. Essential Functions (e.g., Met--Methyl Groups) • c. Oxidative Losses of BCAA • 3. Endogenous Protein Losses • a. Digestive Enzymes & “Sloughing” (MFN ~ DMI) • b. Mucin Synthesis (High Thr Proteins) • c. Defensin Synthesis (Proteins High in Lys & Arg) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  24. Liver Amino Acid Metabolism • 1. Major Site of Amino Acid Metabolism & GlcNG. • 2. Liver “Sees” Absorbed + Recirculated AA • a. Recirculated Amino Acids = 72-98%of Total • b. Relatively Constant Proportion of Each EAA (~12%) Extracted/Pass. • 3. Liver Not Active Regulator of Peripheral Supply. • a. Amino Acid Uptake for “Vital” Functions • b. Removal of Excess Amino Acids Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  25. Catabolism of Amino Acids • 1. Obligate Metabolic Functions (Gly -- Hippurate; • Met -- Methyl Groups) • 2. Losses Related to Increased Turnover (e.g., Incomplete Reutilization of Digestive Secretions) • Imbalance: Removal of Excess Amino Acids (Swine Production vs. Ruminant Production) 4. Utilization of AA for Gluconeogenesis (esp. Dairy Cow) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  26. Is there a Constant Efficiency of Utilization of Metabolizable Protein & Amino Acids? Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  27. Plasma Lys Response to Abomasal Lys & Met Infusion in Growing Steers(Titgemeyer et al., JAS 71:421, 1988) 9.4% CP Steers = 383 kg BW; consumed 7.5 kg DM/d; gained 1.08 kg/d (Basal Supply of Digestible Lys = 53 g/d Duod. x 0.75 = 40 g Lys/d) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  28. Plasma Lys Response to Abomasal Lys & Met Infusion in Growing Steers(Titgemeyer et al., 1988) (L-Lys + 9 g/d DL-Met) (L-Lys only) (DL-Met only) (Lys req. = 40 + 8 = 48 g/d) (Lys req. = 40 + 4 = 44 g/d) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  29. Broken Stick vs. Logistic Model of EAA Utilization (Lapierre et al., 2005) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  30. Relative Protein Efficiencies (Nout/Nin) • 1. 45-60% in Growing Pigs. • 2. Growing Cattle: • a. 20-30% in Young Cattle • b. < 10% at the Feedlot Stage. • 3. Lactating Cattle: • a. 30-35% at Peak Production. • b. 15-20% in Late Lactation. • c. 20-25% Over the Lactation Cycle. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  31. Protein Turnover in the Animal Body • 1. Continual Synthesis & Breakdown of Body Protein. • 2. “Functions” of Protein Turnover: • a. Homeothermy--Basal Heat Production = 4-5 kcal/g Protein Synthesized (~30% for Protein TO) • b. Up/Down Enzyme Regulation • c. Tissue Remodeling • 3. Time Scale of Protein Turnover Varies. Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  32. Protein Intake vs. Turnover • Protein Body Protein • Animal Intake Synthesis Rate (g/day) Sheep 100 250 Human 75 300 Pig 250 500 Steer 1500 2500 Dairy Cow 3000 5000 Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  33. Protein Mass & Turnover 20% 15-20% 8-16% 50% 23-30% 15-20% Skin Muscle 3% 7-14% 35-45% Liver GIT 2% 25% 4-15% 5-7% 23% 32-45% Proportion of Whole Body: Tissue Protein Mass O2 Utilization Protein Synthesis Mammary Gland Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  34. Use of 15N15N-Urea to Quantify Urea Catabolism in GIT “Monomolecular Rxn” Infused: 15N15N-Urea + LiOBr Mass 30 N2 Gas Hydrolyzed: 14N15N-Urea + LiOBr Mass 29 N2 Gas Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  35. Urea Metabolism Quantified in Sheep Using 15N15N-Urea (Lobley et al., 2000) (BW = 50 kg; Intake =1000 g/d) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

  36. Urea Metabolism in Ruminants(Lapierre & Lobley, 2001) (average data from 15N15N-urea studies in cattle & sheep) Ruminology-3--Utilization of Absorbed Protein

More Related