蛋白酶复合物在优化肉仔鸡生产性能的同时减少回肠潜在致病微生物数量

M. Chowdhury, A. Dhara, S. Dey, Anirvid Sarkar, S. Haldar, G. Tactacan
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摘要

本试验旨在研究饲粮中添加一种蛋白酶对标准饲粮和缺乏粗蛋白质和可消化氨基酸(CP/AA, ~5%)、表观代谢能(AME, 50 kcal/kg)或两者均缺乏的饲粮中肉仔鸡生长性能和回肠选定菌群的影响。CP/AA和AME降低对平均日增重(ADG, P < 0.05)和饲料系数(FCR, P < 0.05)均有负面影响。饲粮中添加蛋白酶可提高标准饲粮和营养缺乏饲粮的42 d体重(P = 0.021,线性效应),但只有在标准饲粮中添加蛋白酶才能提高饲料效率(P = 0.0002)。血清蛋白浓度不受CP/AA和AME水平的影响,但与蛋白酶水平呈线性下降(P = 0.02)。随着饲粮CP/AA和AME的降低,大肠杆菌、沙门氏菌和产气荚膜梭菌的数量增加(P = 0.0001)。相反,随着饲粮蛋白酶水平的增加,所研究的细菌数量呈线性减少(P = 0.0001)。饲粮中添加蛋白酶可降低产气荚膜梭菌的数量(P = 0.0001)。由此可见,在低营养密度饲粮中添加蛋白酶维持了试验禽的收获生物量,并减少了后肠内的常驻细菌数量,其中一些细菌可能是潜在的病原体。因此,本研究不仅记录了肉仔鸡饲粮蛋白酶在肠道健康方面的营养节约效应,还记录了额外的蛋白质效应。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Protease Complex Reduces Potentially Pathogenic Microbial Populations in the Ileum While Optimizing Performance of Broiler Chickens
A 42-day trial was conducted to assess the effects of a dietary protease on growth performance and ileum population of selected bacteria in broiler chickens fed standard diets and diets deficient in crude protein and digestible amino acids (CP/AA, ~5%) or apparent metabolizable energy (AME, 50 kcal/kg) or both. Reducing CP/AA and AME negatively affected average daily weight gain (ADG, P < 0.05) and feed conversion ratio (FCR, P < 0.05). Dietary protease improved BW at 42-d (P = 0.021, linear effect) of birds fed both standard and nutrient deficient diets but improved FCR (P = 0.0002) was only observed when supplemented to the standard diet. Serum protein concentration was not affected by the level of CP/AA and AME but decreased linearly with the level of protease (P = 0.02). Numbers of Escherichia coli¸ Salmonella spp. and Clostridium perfringens increased (P = 0.0001) with the decrease of dietary CP/AA and AME. In contrast, the numbers of studied bacteria linearly decreased (P = 0.0001) with dietary protease level. Dietary protease was found to decrease the numbers of Clostridium perfringens (P = 0.0001) when supplemented to either low CP/AA or low AME diets. It can be concluded that protease supplementation sustained the harvesting biomass in the experimental birds fed lower nutrient density diets and decreased the numbers of resident bacteria in the hind gut, some of which might be potential pathogens. Hence, the study documented not only the nutrient sparing effects but also the extra-proteinaceous effect in terms of gut health of dietary protease in broiler chickens.
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