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Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts

Five groups of lambs (n = 9 each) were used to test the effect of plant extracts rich in hydrolysable (HT) or condensed tannin (CT) on animal performance, fatty acid composition of rumen content, liver and meat. The control group (CO) received a concentrate-based diet without tannins supplementation...

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Autores principales: Valenti, Bernardo, Campidonico, Luca, Natalello, Antonio, Lanza, Massimiliano, Salami, Saheed A., Priolo, Alessandro, Serra, Andrea, Pauselli, Mariano, Luciano, Giuseppe
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8494350/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34614022
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258265
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author Valenti, Bernardo
Campidonico, Luca
Natalello, Antonio
Lanza, Massimiliano
Salami, Saheed A.
Priolo, Alessandro
Serra, Andrea
Pauselli, Mariano
Luciano, Giuseppe
author_facet Valenti, Bernardo
Campidonico, Luca
Natalello, Antonio
Lanza, Massimiliano
Salami, Saheed A.
Priolo, Alessandro
Serra, Andrea
Pauselli, Mariano
Luciano, Giuseppe
author_sort Valenti, Bernardo
collection PubMed
description Five groups of lambs (n = 9 each) were used to test the effect of plant extracts rich in hydrolysable (HT) or condensed tannin (CT) on animal performance, fatty acid composition of rumen content, liver and meat. The control group (CO) received a concentrate-based diet without tannins supplementation. The other groups received the same diet as the control lambs plus 4% chestnut (CH) and tara (TA) extracts as a source of HT and mimosa (MI) and gambier (GA) extracts as a source of CT. One-way ANOVA was used to assess the overall effect of dietary treatments, tannins supplementation (CO vs. CH+TA+MI+GA) and the effect of tannin type (HT vs. CT: CH+TA vs. MI+GA) on animal performance, rumen content, liver and intramuscular FA. Dietary CH negatively affected animal performance. The rumen content of the different groups showed similar levels of 18:3 c9c12c15, 18:2 c9c12, 18:2 c9t11, 18:1 t11 and 18:0, whereas 18:1 t10 was greater in CO. Also, 18:1 t10 tended to be lower in the rumen of HT than CT-fed lambs. These data were partially confirmed in liver and meat, where CO showed a greater percentage of individual trans 18:1 fatty acids in comparison with tannins-fed groups. Our findings challenge some accepted generalizations on the use of tannins in ruminant diets as they were ineffective to favour the accumulation of dietary PUFA or healthy fatty acids of biohydrogenation origin in the rumen content and lamb meat, but suggest a generalized influence on BH rather than on specific steps.
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spelling pubmed-84943502021-10-07 Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts Valenti, Bernardo Campidonico, Luca Natalello, Antonio Lanza, Massimiliano Salami, Saheed A. Priolo, Alessandro Serra, Andrea Pauselli, Mariano Luciano, Giuseppe PLoS One Research Article Five groups of lambs (n = 9 each) were used to test the effect of plant extracts rich in hydrolysable (HT) or condensed tannin (CT) on animal performance, fatty acid composition of rumen content, liver and meat. The control group (CO) received a concentrate-based diet without tannins supplementation. The other groups received the same diet as the control lambs plus 4% chestnut (CH) and tara (TA) extracts as a source of HT and mimosa (MI) and gambier (GA) extracts as a source of CT. One-way ANOVA was used to assess the overall effect of dietary treatments, tannins supplementation (CO vs. CH+TA+MI+GA) and the effect of tannin type (HT vs. CT: CH+TA vs. MI+GA) on animal performance, rumen content, liver and intramuscular FA. Dietary CH negatively affected animal performance. The rumen content of the different groups showed similar levels of 18:3 c9c12c15, 18:2 c9c12, 18:2 c9t11, 18:1 t11 and 18:0, whereas 18:1 t10 was greater in CO. Also, 18:1 t10 tended to be lower in the rumen of HT than CT-fed lambs. These data were partially confirmed in liver and meat, where CO showed a greater percentage of individual trans 18:1 fatty acids in comparison with tannins-fed groups. Our findings challenge some accepted generalizations on the use of tannins in ruminant diets as they were ineffective to favour the accumulation of dietary PUFA or healthy fatty acids of biohydrogenation origin in the rumen content and lamb meat, but suggest a generalized influence on BH rather than on specific steps. Public Library of Science 2021-10-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8494350/ /pubmed/34614022 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258265 Text en © 2021 Valenti et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://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
Valenti, Bernardo
Campidonico, Luca
Natalello, Antonio
Lanza, Massimiliano
Salami, Saheed A.
Priolo, Alessandro
Serra, Andrea
Pauselli, Mariano
Luciano, Giuseppe
Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
title Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
title_full Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
title_fullStr Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
title_full_unstemmed Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
title_short Fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
title_sort fatty acid metabolism in lambs supplemented with different condensed and hydrolysable tannin extracts
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8494350/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34614022
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0258265
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