4.7 Article

Phytase supplementation effects on amino acid digestibility depend on the protein source in the diet but are not related to InsP(6) degradation in broiler chickens

Journal

POULTRY SCIENCE
Volume 99, Issue 6, Pages 3251-3265

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.psj.2020.03.010

Keywords

phytate; energy; protein feeds; regression

Funding

  1. BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany

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The objective was to determine phytase effects on prececal amino acid (AA) digestibility and phytate (InsP(6)) breakdown when different oilseed meals were used in broiler chicken diets. The study included 14 diets: a corn-soybean meal (SBM) basal diet and 6 diets that contained SBM, rapeseed meal (RSM), and sun-flower meal (SFM) with 2 inclusion levels at the expense of corn starch (150 and 300 g/kg SBM or SFM, or 100 and 200 g/kg RSM). Each diet was mixed with or without a phytase supplement of 1,500 FTU/kg. Diets were provided to broilers for 5 D. Digesta from the posterior half of the ileum were collected on day 21. The average essential AA digestibility, calculated by a regression approach, without and with phytase was 84 and 85% (SBM), 74 and 77% (SFM), and 66 and 73% (RSM), respectively. In the diets, phytase effects on AA digestibility were lower owing to other protein sources also present in the diet, but significant. Prececal InsP(6) disappearance was significantly affected by interactions between oilseed meal, inclusion level, and phytase sup-plementation. Overall, prececal InsP(6) disappearance was higher in SBM diets (52%) than in SFM diets (38%) and intermediate in RSM diets (43%). Across diets, phytase supplementation effects on prececal InsP(6) degradation linearly increased with the InsP(6) concentration of the diet up to 12 g/kg DM. The only exception from linearity was the diet with the high inclusion of SFM, which contained 15.9 g InsP(6)/kg DM. In the ileal content, the concentration of myo-inositol was significantly increased by phytase supplementation, and this effect was highest in the diets that contained SBM as the only oilseed meal. Concentrations of lower inositol phosphates were increased by phytase supplementation, and this effect was most remarkable for Ins(1,2,3,4)P-4 and inositol tet-rakisphosphates. The study showed that phytase effects on AA digestibility varied among the 3 tested oilseed meals, but these differences were not detectable in the diets containing these meals. Although phytase effects on ileal content of InsP6 and its degradation products were substantial, they were not related to the effects on AA digestibility.

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