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Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis

In a previous experiment, male Ross 308 broiler chickens were offered dietary treatments with 3 levels of crude protein (222, 193, 165 g/kg) and 3 feed grains (ground maize, ground wheat, whole wheat) from 7 to 35 d post–hatch. Maize-based diets supported superior growth performance in comparison to...

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Autores principales: Selle, Peter H., Cantor, David I., McQuade, Leon R., McInerney, Bernard V., de Paula Dorigam, Juliano Cesar, Macelline, Shemil P., Chrystal, Peter V., Liu, Sonia Y.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: KeAi Publishing 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8526770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34703911
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aninu.2021.03.011
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author Selle, Peter H.
Cantor, David I.
McQuade, Leon R.
McInerney, Bernard V.
de Paula Dorigam, Juliano Cesar
Macelline, Shemil P.
Chrystal, Peter V.
Liu, Sonia Y.
author_facet Selle, Peter H.
Cantor, David I.
McQuade, Leon R.
McInerney, Bernard V.
de Paula Dorigam, Juliano Cesar
Macelline, Shemil P.
Chrystal, Peter V.
Liu, Sonia Y.
author_sort Selle, Peter H.
collection PubMed
description In a previous experiment, male Ross 308 broiler chickens were offered dietary treatments with 3 levels of crude protein (222, 193, 165 g/kg) and 3 feed grains (ground maize, ground wheat, whole wheat) from 7 to 35 d post–hatch. Maize-based diets supported superior growth performance in comparison to wheat-based diets. Uric acid concentrations in excreta were retrospectively determined and related to total nitrogen (N) excreta concentrations. Uric acid concentrations ranged from 28.5 to 69.4 mg/g and proportions of uric acid-N to total excreta-N ranged from 27.4% to 42.6% in broiler chickens offered the 3 × 3 factorial array of dietary treatments. Proportions of uric acid-N to total N in excreta in birds offered the 165 g/kg CP, maize-based diet were significantly lower by 10.6 percentage units (27.4% versus 38.0%; P = 0.00057) than their wheat-based counterparts. Total excreta analysed had been collected from 35 to 37 d post–hatch when feed intakes and excreta outputs were monitored. There were linear relationships between proportions of uric acid-N to total N in excreta in birds offered the three 165 g/kg CP diets with weight gain (r = −0.587; P = 0.010), feed intake (r = −0.526; P = 0.025) and feed conversion ratios (r = 0.635; P = 0.005). The possibility that increasing uric acid-N proportions in excreta is indicative of excessive ammonia accumulations compromising growth performance is discussed. The mean proportion of dietary glycine involved in uric acid excretion was 49.2% across all dietary treatments but ranged from 25.0% to 80.9%. Thus, the appropriate amount of dietary glycine is variable and largely dependent on the volume of uric acid synthesised and excreted.
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spelling pubmed-85267702021-10-25 Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis Selle, Peter H. Cantor, David I. McQuade, Leon R. McInerney, Bernard V. de Paula Dorigam, Juliano Cesar Macelline, Shemil P. Chrystal, Peter V. Liu, Sonia Y. Anim Nutr Original Research Article In a previous experiment, male Ross 308 broiler chickens were offered dietary treatments with 3 levels of crude protein (222, 193, 165 g/kg) and 3 feed grains (ground maize, ground wheat, whole wheat) from 7 to 35 d post–hatch. Maize-based diets supported superior growth performance in comparison to wheat-based diets. Uric acid concentrations in excreta were retrospectively determined and related to total nitrogen (N) excreta concentrations. Uric acid concentrations ranged from 28.5 to 69.4 mg/g and proportions of uric acid-N to total excreta-N ranged from 27.4% to 42.6% in broiler chickens offered the 3 × 3 factorial array of dietary treatments. Proportions of uric acid-N to total N in excreta in birds offered the 165 g/kg CP, maize-based diet were significantly lower by 10.6 percentage units (27.4% versus 38.0%; P = 0.00057) than their wheat-based counterparts. Total excreta analysed had been collected from 35 to 37 d post–hatch when feed intakes and excreta outputs were monitored. There were linear relationships between proportions of uric acid-N to total N in excreta in birds offered the three 165 g/kg CP diets with weight gain (r = −0.587; P = 0.010), feed intake (r = −0.526; P = 0.025) and feed conversion ratios (r = 0.635; P = 0.005). The possibility that increasing uric acid-N proportions in excreta is indicative of excessive ammonia accumulations compromising growth performance is discussed. The mean proportion of dietary glycine involved in uric acid excretion was 49.2% across all dietary treatments but ranged from 25.0% to 80.9%. Thus, the appropriate amount of dietary glycine is variable and largely dependent on the volume of uric acid synthesised and excreted. KeAi Publishing 2021-12 2021-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC8526770/ /pubmed/34703911 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aninu.2021.03.011 Text en © 2021 Chinese Association of Animal Science and Veterinary Medicine. Publishing services by Elsevier B.V. on behalf of KeAi Communications Co. Ltd. https://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 Original Research Article
Selle, Peter H.
Cantor, David I.
McQuade, Leon R.
McInerney, Bernard V.
de Paula Dorigam, Juliano Cesar
Macelline, Shemil P.
Chrystal, Peter V.
Liu, Sonia Y.
Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
title Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
title_full Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
title_fullStr Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
title_full_unstemmed Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
title_short Implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
title_sort implications of excreta uric acid concentrations in broilers offered reduced-crude protein diets and dietary glycine requirements for uric acid synthesis
topic Original Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8526770/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34703911
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aninu.2021.03.011
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