Cysteamine: a human health dietary additive with potential to improve livestock growth rate and efficiency

Author(s)
Barnett, M C
Hegarty, R S
Publication Date
2016
Abstract
<p>Cysteamine is a biological compound produced in the gastrointestinal tract and hypothalamus of all animals that acts on the somatotrophic axis. Cysteamine is finding increasing application in human medicine and also as a natural, in-feed growth promotant for monogastric and ruminant livestock that increases feed conversion efficiency, growth rate and leanness. It improves nutrient digestion and absorption by increasing portal-drained viscera blood flow and net portal absorption, while also reducing gastroenteropancreatic, plasma and hypothalamus concentrations of the inhibitory hormone, somatostatin (SRIF). Dietary inclusion rates required to achieve growth responses are typically about 10 times higher in ruminants than those required for pigs, but it is unclear whether ruminal breakdown of cysteamine is contributing to this difference. While short-term stimulation of growth, milk production and improved feed use efficiency are apparent, studies over longer periods are required, especially in breeding animals, due to the process of SRIF depletion being reversible. This review provides an overview of cysteamine’s mode of action in improving nutrient utilisation and its application in human nutrition and health, as well as its potential use as a growth promotant in the livestock industries.</p>
Citation
Animal Production Science, 56(8), p. 1330-1338
ISSN
1836-5787
1836-0939
Link
Language
en
Publisher
CSIRO Publishing
Title
Cysteamine: a human health dietary additive with potential to improve livestock growth rate and efficiency
Type of document
Conference Publication
Entity Type
Publication

Files:

NameSizeformatDescriptionLink