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The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase

Body phosphorus homeostasis network allows laying hens to adapt to wide range of changes in dietary phosphorus levels. Phytase hydrolyzes phytate rendering phosphorus and reduces the laying hens' requirements for inorganic phosphate rock. Here, we demonstrate that there is no need to keep large...

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Autores principales: Ren, Zhouzheng, Sun, Wenqiang, Cheng, Xi, Liu, Yanli, Han, Di, Yan, Jiakun, Pan, Chong, Duan, Yulan, Yang, Xiaojun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7597811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32616248
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2020.03.033
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author Ren, Zhouzheng
Sun, Wenqiang
Cheng, Xi
Liu, Yanli
Han, Di
Yan, Jiakun
Pan, Chong
Duan, Yulan
Yang, Xiaojun
author_facet Ren, Zhouzheng
Sun, Wenqiang
Cheng, Xi
Liu, Yanli
Han, Di
Yan, Jiakun
Pan, Chong
Duan, Yulan
Yang, Xiaojun
author_sort Ren, Zhouzheng
collection PubMed
description Body phosphorus homeostasis network allows laying hens to adapt to wide range of changes in dietary phosphorus levels. Phytase hydrolyzes phytate rendering phosphorus and reduces the laying hens' requirements for inorganic phosphate rock. Here, we demonstrate that there is no need to keep large safety margins in dietary phosphorus when hens are fed with phytase. Hy-Line Brown laying hens (n = 504) were randomly assigned to 7 treatments (6 replicates of 12 birds). A corn-soybean meal–based diet, with no inorganic phosphate rock, was formulated to contain 0.12% nonphytate phosphorus (nPP), 3.8% calcium, and 2,000 FTU/kg phytase. Inorganic phosphate rock (di-calcium phosphate) was supplemented into the basal diet to create 6 other diets containing 0.17, 0.22, 0.27, 0.32, 0.37, and 0.42% nPP. Levels of calcium carbonate and zeolite powder were adjusted to make sure all the 7 experimental diets contained the same nutrition levels (including calcium and phytase) except nPP. The diets were subjected to laying hens from 29 to 40 wk of age. As a result, when supplemented with 2,000 FTU/kg phytase, extra supplementation of inorganic phosphate rock had no effects (P > 0.05) on serum phosphorus levels, serum calcium levels, laying performance (laying rate, egg weight, feed intake, feed-to-egg ratio, and unqualified egg rate), egg quality (shell thickness, shell strength, albumen height, yolk color, and Haugh unit), and tibia quality parameters (breaking strength and ash, calcium, and phosphorus contents). Extra supplementation of inorganic phosphate rock linearly increased (P < 0.01) fecal phosphorus excretion and linearly decreased (P = 0.032) the apparent metabolizability of dietary phosphorus. While serum hormones and intestine gene expressions were varied within treatments, no consistent changes were found. In conclusion, the supplementation of inorganic phosphate rock (provided 0.05–0.30% extra nPP) to phytase-containing basal diets (2,000 FTU/kg; nPP = 0.12%) provided limited benefits to egg production performance in laying hens from 29 to 40 wk of age. Further investigating the body phosphorus homeostasis would help to understand the nutritional and physiological reasonability of formulating low-phosphorus diets in the laying hen industry.
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spelling pubmed-75978112020-11-03 The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase Ren, Zhouzheng Sun, Wenqiang Cheng, Xi Liu, Yanli Han, Di Yan, Jiakun Pan, Chong Duan, Yulan Yang, Xiaojun Poult Sci Metabolism and Nutrition Body phosphorus homeostasis network allows laying hens to adapt to wide range of changes in dietary phosphorus levels. Phytase hydrolyzes phytate rendering phosphorus and reduces the laying hens' requirements for inorganic phosphate rock. Here, we demonstrate that there is no need to keep large safety margins in dietary phosphorus when hens are fed with phytase. Hy-Line Brown laying hens (n = 504) were randomly assigned to 7 treatments (6 replicates of 12 birds). A corn-soybean meal–based diet, with no inorganic phosphate rock, was formulated to contain 0.12% nonphytate phosphorus (nPP), 3.8% calcium, and 2,000 FTU/kg phytase. Inorganic phosphate rock (di-calcium phosphate) was supplemented into the basal diet to create 6 other diets containing 0.17, 0.22, 0.27, 0.32, 0.37, and 0.42% nPP. Levels of calcium carbonate and zeolite powder were adjusted to make sure all the 7 experimental diets contained the same nutrition levels (including calcium and phytase) except nPP. The diets were subjected to laying hens from 29 to 40 wk of age. As a result, when supplemented with 2,000 FTU/kg phytase, extra supplementation of inorganic phosphate rock had no effects (P > 0.05) on serum phosphorus levels, serum calcium levels, laying performance (laying rate, egg weight, feed intake, feed-to-egg ratio, and unqualified egg rate), egg quality (shell thickness, shell strength, albumen height, yolk color, and Haugh unit), and tibia quality parameters (breaking strength and ash, calcium, and phosphorus contents). Extra supplementation of inorganic phosphate rock linearly increased (P < 0.01) fecal phosphorus excretion and linearly decreased (P = 0.032) the apparent metabolizability of dietary phosphorus. While serum hormones and intestine gene expressions were varied within treatments, no consistent changes were found. In conclusion, the supplementation of inorganic phosphate rock (provided 0.05–0.30% extra nPP) to phytase-containing basal diets (2,000 FTU/kg; nPP = 0.12%) provided limited benefits to egg production performance in laying hens from 29 to 40 wk of age. Further investigating the body phosphorus homeostasis would help to understand the nutritional and physiological reasonability of formulating low-phosphorus diets in the laying hen industry. Elsevier 2020-04-15 /pmc/articles/PMC7597811/ /pubmed/32616248 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2020.03.033 Text en © 2020 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of Poultry Science Association Inc. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Metabolism and Nutrition
Ren, Zhouzheng
Sun, Wenqiang
Cheng, Xi
Liu, Yanli
Han, Di
Yan, Jiakun
Pan, Chong
Duan, Yulan
Yang, Xiaojun
The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
title The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
title_full The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
title_fullStr The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
title_full_unstemmed The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
title_short The adaptability of Hy-Line Brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
title_sort adaptability of hy-line brown laying hens to low-phosphorus diets supplemented with phytase
topic Metabolism and Nutrition
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7597811/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/32616248
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2020.03.033
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