Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/61722
Title: Glycine Equivalents in Low Protein Diets
Contributor(s): Hilliar, Matthew  (creator)orcid ; Wu, Shubiao  (supervisor)orcid ; Kheravii, Sarbast  (partner investigator)orcid ; Swick, Robert  (supervisor)orcid 
Corporate Author: Evonik Industries, Animal Nutrition
Publication Date: 2019-09-30
DOI: 10.25952/aq4y-p942
Handle Link: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/61722
Related Research Outputs: https://hdl.handle.net/1959.11/57163
Abstract/Context: A second experiment was completed to determine if supplementing glycine precursors have the same effect on performance as glycine in reduced protein diets. Ross 308 cockerels were fed one of two protein levels; an industry-standard protein diet with meat and bone meal or a plant-based diet approximately 3% lower in crude protein. In the low protein diet, glycine, serine, and threonine were assigned a glycine equivalence and supplemented to match the glycine in the standard protein diet at 1.558 and 1.390% in grower and finisher diets respectively. Reducing the dietary protein by 3% reduced feed efficiency, however, the supplementation of glycine or serine did not affect performance. Threonine supplementation further reduced feed efficiency and decreased body weight gain in reduced protein diets. Therefore, glycine did not appear to be limiting in the reduced protein diets investigated, however, using threonine to supplement glycine requirements exacerbated the performance reducing effects of reduced protein diets. In addition to the treatments described above another glycine equivalence level of serine and threonine at 1.800% was also investigated in the second experiment. Using these treatments the effects of reduced protein diets on glycine and uric acid metabolism could be investigated. The in vivo conversion of serine and threonine to glycine was evident in the blood plasma, however, reducing dietary protein reduced blood serum uric acid. The hepatic expression of genes for enzymes associated with threonine degradation to glycine, glycine degradation, and uric acid-synthesis were down-regulated in reduced protein diets. The supplementation of excess essential amino acids and non-specific nitrogen may not fulfil the non-essential amino acid requirements for efficient growth as the synthesis of non-essential amino acids is altered in reduced protein diets.
Publication Type: Dataset
Fields of Research (FOR): 070202 Animal Growth and Development
Fields of Research (FoR) 2020: 300301 Animal growth and development
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO): 830309 Poultry
Socio-Economic Objective (SEO) 2020: 100411 Poultry
Keywords: Poultry
Amino acids
Nonessential
Threonine
Serine
Broilers
HERDC Category Description: X Dataset
Project: Amino acid supplementation in reduced protein diets and the impacts on meat-chicken performance, biochemistry, and physiology
Dataset Managed By: Matthew Hilliar
Dataset Stored at: University of New England
Primary Contact Details: Matthew Hilliar - matthilliar@gmail.com
Dataset Custodian Details: Matthew Hilliar - matthilliar@gmail.com
Appears in Collections:Dataset

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