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Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs

The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of increasing doses of bacterial phytase (RONOZYME HiPhos) on performance and carcass characteristics of growing and finishing pigs. The study included 120 castrated males with initial weight of 23.21 ± 1.91 kg and 68 days of age, distributed in...

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Autores principales: da Silva, Caio Abércio, Callegari, Marco Aurélio, Dias, Cleandro Pazinato, Bridi, Ana Maria, Pierozan, Carlos Rodolfo, Foppa, Luciana, Martins, Claudia Cassimira da Silva, Dias, Francine Taniguchi Falleiros, Passos, Adsos, Hermes, Rafael
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6534334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31125379
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0217490
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author da Silva, Caio Abércio
Callegari, Marco Aurélio
Dias, Cleandro Pazinato
Bridi, Ana Maria
Pierozan, Carlos Rodolfo
Foppa, Luciana
Martins, Claudia Cassimira da Silva
Dias, Francine Taniguchi Falleiros
Passos, Adsos
Hermes, Rafael
author_facet da Silva, Caio Abércio
Callegari, Marco Aurélio
Dias, Cleandro Pazinato
Bridi, Ana Maria
Pierozan, Carlos Rodolfo
Foppa, Luciana
Martins, Claudia Cassimira da Silva
Dias, Francine Taniguchi Falleiros
Passos, Adsos
Hermes, Rafael
author_sort da Silva, Caio Abércio
collection PubMed
description The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of increasing doses of bacterial phytase (RONOZYME HiPhos) on performance and carcass characteristics of growing and finishing pigs. The study included 120 castrated males with initial weight of 23.21 ± 1.91 kg and 68 days of age, distributed in a randomized block design with five treatments and eight replicates with three animals each. The pigs were fed five corn-soybean meal-based diets: positive control (PC), supplemented with inorganic phosphorus and calcium; negative control (NC), with 0.13% reduction in available phosphorus and 0.11% in calcium; and three NC diets supplemented with 1,000, 2,000, and 3,000 phytase units (FYT)/kg in the feed. Compared with the NC diets without phytase, diets with 1,000, 2,000, and 3,000 FYT/kg inclusion increased the daily weight gain by +12% (quadratic, p<0.05) during the growing I period; +2.9, +2.9, and +10.5% (linear, p<0.01), respectively, during the growing II period; and +4.1, +5.1, and +8.2% (linear, p<0.001), respectively, over the entire experimental period. The daily feed intake increased by 0, +2.8, and +4.3% (linear, p<0.05), respectively, considering the entire experimental period; and the final live weight increased by +3.2, +4.2, and +6.1% (linear, p<0.001), respectively. The phytase treatments did not influence feed conversion ratio, carcass weight and yield, backfat thickness, loin depth and carcass lean meat. According to the European Carcass Classification (SEUROP), however, the animals fed the PC diet and the three phytase levels had more carcasses classified as E (between 55–60% lean meat) when compared to carcasses of pigs fed the NC. Supplementing increasing levels of phytase to a corn- and soybean meal-based diet with inorganic P and Ca reduction improved daily weight gain and feed intake of growing pigs, and such effects were maintained until slaughter age.
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spelling pubmed-65343342019-06-05 Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs da Silva, Caio Abércio Callegari, Marco Aurélio Dias, Cleandro Pazinato Bridi, Ana Maria Pierozan, Carlos Rodolfo Foppa, Luciana Martins, Claudia Cassimira da Silva Dias, Francine Taniguchi Falleiros Passos, Adsos Hermes, Rafael PLoS One Research Article The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of increasing doses of bacterial phytase (RONOZYME HiPhos) on performance and carcass characteristics of growing and finishing pigs. The study included 120 castrated males with initial weight of 23.21 ± 1.91 kg and 68 days of age, distributed in a randomized block design with five treatments and eight replicates with three animals each. The pigs were fed five corn-soybean meal-based diets: positive control (PC), supplemented with inorganic phosphorus and calcium; negative control (NC), with 0.13% reduction in available phosphorus and 0.11% in calcium; and three NC diets supplemented with 1,000, 2,000, and 3,000 phytase units (FYT)/kg in the feed. Compared with the NC diets without phytase, diets with 1,000, 2,000, and 3,000 FYT/kg inclusion increased the daily weight gain by +12% (quadratic, p<0.05) during the growing I period; +2.9, +2.9, and +10.5% (linear, p<0.01), respectively, during the growing II period; and +4.1, +5.1, and +8.2% (linear, p<0.001), respectively, over the entire experimental period. The daily feed intake increased by 0, +2.8, and +4.3% (linear, p<0.05), respectively, considering the entire experimental period; and the final live weight increased by +3.2, +4.2, and +6.1% (linear, p<0.001), respectively. The phytase treatments did not influence feed conversion ratio, carcass weight and yield, backfat thickness, loin depth and carcass lean meat. According to the European Carcass Classification (SEUROP), however, the animals fed the PC diet and the three phytase levels had more carcasses classified as E (between 55–60% lean meat) when compared to carcasses of pigs fed the NC. Supplementing increasing levels of phytase to a corn- and soybean meal-based diet with inorganic P and Ca reduction improved daily weight gain and feed intake of growing pigs, and such effects were maintained until slaughter age. Public Library of Science 2019-05-24 /pmc/articles/PMC6534334/ /pubmed/31125379 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0217490 Text en © 2019 da Silva et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
da Silva, Caio Abércio
Callegari, Marco Aurélio
Dias, Cleandro Pazinato
Bridi, Ana Maria
Pierozan, Carlos Rodolfo
Foppa, Luciana
Martins, Claudia Cassimira da Silva
Dias, Francine Taniguchi Falleiros
Passos, Adsos
Hermes, Rafael
Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
title Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
title_full Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
title_fullStr Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
title_full_unstemmed Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
title_short Increasing doses of phytase from Citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
title_sort increasing doses of phytase from citrobacter braakii in diets with reduced inorganic phosphorus and calcium improve growth performance and lean meat of growing and finishing pigs
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6534334/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31125379
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0217490
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