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1.
Animal ; 16 Suppl 1: 100376, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34836809

ABSTRACT

This article critically reviews the current state of knowledge on the quality of animal-source foods according to animal production and food processing conditions, including consumer expectations-behaviours and the effects of consumption of animal-source foods on human health. Quality has been defined through seven core attributes: safety, commercial, sensory, nutritional, technological, convenience, and image. Image covers ethical, cultural and environmental dimensions associated with the origin of the food and the way it is produced and processed. This framework enabled to highlight the priorities given to the different quality attributes. It also helped to identify potential antagonisms and synergies among quality attributes, between production and processing stages, and among stakeholders. Primacy is essentially given to commercial quality attributes, especially for standard commodity animal-source foods. This primacy has strongly influenced genetic selection and farming practices in all livestock commodity chains and enabled substantial quantitative gains, although at the expense of other quality traits. Focal issues are the destructuration of chicken muscle that compromises sensory, nutritional and image quality attributes, and the fate of males in the egg and dairy sectors, which have heavily specialised their animals. Quality can be gained but can also be lost throughout the farm-to-fork continuum. Our review highlights critical factors and periods throughout animal production and food processing routes, such as on-farm practices, notably animal feeding, preslaughter and slaughter phases, food processing techniques, and food formulation. It also reveals on-farm and processing factors that create antagonisms among quality attributes, such as the castration of male pigs, the substitution of marine-source feed by plant-based feed in fish, and the use of sodium nitrite in meat processing. These antagonisms require scientific data to identify trade-offs among quality attributes and/or solutions to help overcome these tensions. However, there are also food products that value synergies between quality attributes and between production and processing phases, particularly Geographical Indications, such as for cheese and dry-cured ham. Human epidemiological studies have found associations between consumption of animal-source foods and increased or decreased risk for chronic non-communicable diseases. These associations have informed public health recommendations. However, they have not yet considered animal production and food processing conditions. A concerted and collaborative effort is needed from scientists working in animal science, food process engineering, consumer science, human nutrition and epidemiology in order to address this research gap. Avenues for research and main options for policy action are discussed.


Subject(s)
Animal Feed , Meat , Animals , Livestock , Male , Nutritional Status , Swine
2.
Annu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc ; 2020: 4433-4436, 2020 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33018978

ABSTRACT

Visceral congestion and edema are important features of advanced heart failure. Monitoring the evolution of fluid content in the gastric wall might provide an index of the development of this phenomenon and therefore constitute an innovative marker to early detect acute decompensated heart failure episodes. The evolution of the fluid content in the gastric wall is measured using a device implanted in the submucosa layer of the fundic region of the stomach. The device composed of two electrodes measures the bioimpedance values that reflects the water content of the tissue.An in-vivo experiment in a pig was carried out to validate the feasibility of detecting the gastric bioimpedance variations during the development of an experimental acute visceral edema caused by an endotoxemic shock. Our preliminary results confirm the possibility to monitor the bioimpedance variations due to moderate changes in tissue water content (10%) with a two-electrode configuration device implanted in the submucosa of the stomach.


Subject(s)
Endotoxemia , Heart Failure , Shock , Animals , Edema/diagnosis , Stomach , Swine
3.
Food Chem ; 249: 111-118, 2018 May 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29407913

ABSTRACT

We studied the kinetics of peptide release during the gastric digestion of meat proteins in vivo, in view to predicting the release of bioactive peptides further on in the digestive tract. Six mini pigs fitted with gastric cannulas received a meal with cooked beef as protein source. Digesta was collected at regular time intervals up to 5½â€¯h. The peptides generated by the gastric digestion of meat were identified and quantified using label-free LC MS, thereafter subjected to in silico digestion mimicking the action of intestinal enzymes. Three clusters of proteins presenting similar evolutions according to their dynamic hydrolysis were obtained. This study clearly improves the in silico prediction of the intestinal release of bioactive peptides by mapping meat protein degradation in the stomach in an in vivo model. Knowledge of the conformation of the peptides released in the stomach further improves this prediction.


Subject(s)
Meat/analysis , Peptides/metabolism , Swine/metabolism , Animal Feed/analysis , Animals , Cattle , Chromatography, Liquid , Computer Simulation , Dietary Proteins/chemistry , Dietary Proteins/metabolism , Digestion , Gastric Mucosa/metabolism , Kinetics , Peptide Mapping , Peptides/chemistry , Proteolysis , Swine/growth & development , Tandem Mass Spectrometry
4.
Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr ; 58(13): 2239-2261, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28613945

ABSTRACT

During the last decade, there has been a growing interest in understanding food's digestive fate in order to strengthen the possible effects of food on human health. Ideally, food digestion should be studied in vivo on humans but this is not always ethically and financially possible. Therefore, simple in vitro digestion models mimicking the gastrointestinal tract have been proposed as alternatives to in vivo experiments. Thus, it is no surprise that these models are increasingly used by the scientific community, although their various limitations to fully mirror the complexity of the digestive tract. Therefore, the objective of this article was to call upon the collective experiences of scientists involved in Infogest (an international network on food digestion) to review and reflect on the applications of in vitro digestion models, the parameters assessed in such studies and the physiological relevance of the data generated when compared to in vivo data. The authors provide a comprehensive review in vitro and in vivo digestion studies investigating the digestion of macronutrients (i.e., proteins, lipids, and carbohydrates) as well as studies of the bioaccessibility and bioavailability of micronutrients and phytochemicals. The main conclusion is that evidences show that despite the simplicity of in vitro models they are often very useful in predicting outcomes of the digestion in vivo. However, this has relies on the complexity of in vitro models and their tuning toward answering specific questions related to human digestion physiology, which leaves a vast room for future studies and improvements.


Subject(s)
Digestion/physiology , Food , Gastrointestinal Tract/physiology , Humans , Models, Biological
5.
J Physiol Pharmacol ; 67(5): 759-768, 2016 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28011956

ABSTRACT

The availability of all amino acids is of prime importance to prevent the ageing-associated decrease in skeletal muscle mass i.e. sarcopenia. Cysteine is the precursor of sulfate and glutathione that are both utilized in the liver to detoxify paracetamol (APAP). Cysteine availability could become limiting under repeated cures with APAP, especially when food intake is suboptimal. The aim of the study was to determine whether repeated cures with APAP could worsen sarcopenia. Twenty-two-month-old male Wistar rats received 3 two-week-long cures of APAP (1% of the diet) intercalated with washout periods of two weeks (APAP group). They were compared to untreated control rats euthanatized prior to the experiment (CT group) and rats pair-fed to the APAP group (PF group). Skeletal muscle mass and protein metabolism, as well as plasma amino acids and glutathione were assessed at the end of the third cure. APAP cures reduced food intake by 33, 23 and 33 % during the successive cures leading to an overall body weight loss of 8%. APAP rats lost lean mass during the experiment (-11%). This loss tended (P = 0.09) to be higher than in the PF group (-9%). The mass of hind limb muscles and the absolute synthesis rate of muscle proteins were 13 and 17% lower in the APAP group than the PF group, respectively. Plasma free cyst(e)ine (i.e. all free forms of cysteine not bound to proteins) and glutathione were 25% lower in the APAP group than the PF group. Repeated cures with APAP worsened sarcopenia in old rats with suboptimal food intake likely as a consequence of the APAP-induced shortage in cysteine/glutathione. Clinical studies are needed to clarify the effect of repeated treatments with paracetamol on skeletal muscle mass in older persons having suboptimal or insufficient dietary intakes.


Subject(s)
Acetaminophen/adverse effects , Eating , Sarcopenia/chemically induced , Aging/physiology , Amino Acids/blood , Animals , Glutathione/blood , Glutathione/metabolism , Liver/drug effects , Liver/metabolism , Male , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Rats, Wistar , Sarcopenia/blood , Sarcopenia/metabolism
6.
Br J Nutr ; 116(12): 2091-2096, 2016 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28069089

ABSTRACT

Lycopene (LYC) bioavailability is relatively low and highly variable, because of the influence of several factors. Recent in vitro data have suggested that dietary Ca can impair LYC micellarisation, but there is no evidence whether this can lead to decreased LYC absorption efficiency in humans. Our objective was to assess whether a nutritional dose of Ca impairs dietary LYC bioavailability and to study the mechanism(s) involved. First, in a randomised, two-way cross-over study, ten healthy adults consumed either a test meal that provided 19-mg (all-E)-LYC from tomato paste or the same meal plus 500-mg calcium carbonate as a supplement. Plasma LYC concentration was measured at regular time intervals over 7 h postprandially. In a second approach, an in vitro digestion model was used to assess the effect of increasing Ca doses on LYC micellarisation and on the size and zeta potential of the mixed micelles produced during digestion of a complex food matrix. LYC bioavailability was diminished by 83 % following the addition of Ca in the test meal. In vitro, Ca affected neither LYC micellarisation nor mixed micelle size but it decreased the absolute value of their charge by 39 %. In conclusion, a nutritional dose of Ca can impair dietary LYC bioavailability in healthy humans. This inhibition could be due to the fact that Ca diminishes the electrical charge of micelles. These results call for a thorough assessment of the effects of Ca, or other divalent minerals, on the bioavailability of other carotenoids and lipophilic micronutrients.


Subject(s)
Calcium, Dietary/adverse effects , Carotenoids/antagonists & inhibitors , Dietary Supplements/adverse effects , Digestion , Fruit/chemistry , Intestinal Absorption , Solanum lycopersicum/chemistry , Adult , Calcium Carbonate/administration & dosage , Cardiovascular Diseases/epidemiology , Cardiovascular Diseases/etiology , Carotenoids/blood , Carotenoids/metabolism , Cross-Over Studies , Female , France/epidemiology , Humans , Incidence , Lycopene , Male , Meals , Micelles , Nutritive Value , Prostatic Neoplasms/epidemiology , Prostatic Neoplasms/etiology , Risk , Surface Properties , Young Adult
7.
Nutr Res Rev ; 28(1): 22-41, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26156215

ABSTRACT

At the crossroad between nutrient supply and requirements, the liver plays a central role in partitioning nitrogenous nutrients among tissues. The present review examines the utilisation of amino acids (AA) within the liver in various physiopathological states in mammals and how the fates of AA are regulated. AA uptake by the liver is generally driven by the net portal appearance of AA. This coordination is lost when demands by peripheral tissues is important (rapid growth or lactation), or when certain metabolic pathways within the liver become a priority (synthesis of acute-phase proteins). Data obtained in various species have shown that oxidation of AA and export protein synthesis usually responds to nutrient supply. Gluconeogenesis from AA is less dependent on hepatic delivery and the nature of nutrients supplied, and hormones like insulin are involved in the regulatory processes. Gluconeogenesis is regulated by nutritional factors very differently between mammals (glucose absorbed from the diet is important in single-stomached animals, while in carnivores, glucose from endogenous origin is key). The underlying mechanisms explaining how the liver adapts its AA utilisation to the body requirements are complex. The highly adaptable hepatic metabolism must be capable to deal with the various nutritional/physiological challenges that mammals have to face to maintain homeostasis. Whereas the liver responds generally to nutritional parameters in various physiological states occurring throughout life, other complex signalling pathways at systemic and tissue level (hormones, cytokines, nutrients, etc.) are involved additionally in specific physiological/nutritional states to prioritise certain metabolic pathways (pathological states or when nutritional requirements are uncovered).


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/metabolism , Homeostasis/physiology , Liver/metabolism , Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Blood Glucose/metabolism , Carnivora/metabolism , Eating , Energy Metabolism , Food , Gluconeogenesis , Humans , Insulin , Nutritional Requirements , Oxidation-Reduction , Protein Biosynthesis , Ruminants/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology
8.
J Physiol Pharmacol ; 65(5): 623-31, 2014 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25371521

ABSTRACT

The use of glutathione (GSH) and sulfate for the detoxification of paracetamol (acetaminophen, APAP) could occur at the expense of the physiological uses of cysteine (Cys). Indeed GSH and sulfate both originate from Cys. Significant APAP-induced Cys loss could generate alterations in GSH and protein metabolisms leading to muscle wasting. The study aimed to investigate the effects of chronic treatment with APAP on whole-body and tissue homeostasis (mass, GSH, proteins, and nitrogen balance) in relation to sulfur losses through APAP-detoxification pathways. Adult male Wistar rats were fed 0% APAP, 0.5% APAP or 1% APAP diets for 17 days. APAP doses were respectively around and largely above the threshold of sulfation saturation for rats. During the last days, the rats were placed in metabolic cages in order to quantify N balance and urinary APAP metabolites. Gastrocnemius muscle mass, protein and GSH contents, N balance and plasma free cyst(e)ine were 8% (P=0.02), 7% (P=0.03), 26% (P=0.01), 37% (P=0.01), and 33% (P=0.003) lower in the 1% APAP group than in the 0% APAP group, respectively. There was no significant difference in these parameters between the 0.5% APAP group and the 0% APAP group. Muscle wasting occurred when the detoxification of APAP through the GSH-dependent pathway was highly activated. Muscle protein synthesis could have been reduced due to a shortage in Cys and/or an increase in protein degradation in response to intra-muscular oxidative stress. Hence, without dietary sulphur amino acid increase, peripheral bioavailability of Cys and muscle GSH are potential players in the control of muscle mass under chronic treatment with APAP, an analgesic medication of widespread use, especially in the elderly.


Subject(s)
Acetaminophen/adverse effects , Analgesics, Non-Narcotic/adverse effects , Glutathione/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/drug effects , Muscular Atrophy/chemically induced , Acetaminophen/pharmacokinetics , Acetaminophen/urine , Alanine Transaminase/blood , Analgesics, Non-Narcotic/pharmacokinetics , Analgesics, Non-Narcotic/urine , Animals , Aspartate Aminotransferases/blood , Cysteine/blood , Feces/chemistry , Male , Muscle Proteins/metabolism , Muscle, Skeletal/anatomy & histology , Muscle, Skeletal/metabolism , Muscular Atrophy/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Rats, Wistar
9.
Food Chem ; 136(3-4): 1249-62, 2013 Feb 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23194521

ABSTRACT

Meat is an appropriate source of proteins and minerals for human nutrition. Technological treatments modify the physical-chemical properties of proteins, making them liable to decrease the nutritional potential of meat. To counteract this damage, antioxidants and chaperone proteins in muscle cells can prevent oxidation, restore the function of denatured proteins, and thus prevent aggregation. This study aimed to explore the impact of indoor vs outdoor-reared meat protein composition on digestion and to associate protein markers to in vitro digestion parameters. Indoor-reared meat tended to show less oxidation and denaturation than outdoor-reared meat and was characterised by an overexpression of contractile and chaperone proteins. Outdoor-reared meat showed amplification of antioxidant and detoxification metabolism defending against oxidised compounds. Impacts on digestion remained minor. Several protein markers of in vitro digestion parameters were found for aged and cooked meat, linked to the detoxification process and to muscle contraction.


Subject(s)
Digestion , Meat/analysis , Muscle, Skeletal/chemistry , Proteins/chemistry , Swine/growth & development , Animals , Biomarkers/analysis , Cooking , Humans , Models, Biological , Oxidation-Reduction , Proteomics , Time Factors
10.
Animal ; 5(5): 678-90, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22439991

ABSTRACT

We investigated the effect of relative changes in dietary nitrogen (N) and energy supply and the subsequent variations in net portal appearance (NPA) of nitrogenous and energy nutrients on the net amino acid (AA) uptake by the liver and net N supply to the peripheral tissues. Six lambs were catheterised across the splanchnic tissues and received, in a replicated Latin square, one of three dietary treatments. The diets were formulated to either match the requirements of N and energy (C), or supply only 0.8 of the N requirement (LN) or 0.8 of the energy requirement (LE). Net fluxes of AA and urea-N were measured across the portal-drained viscera, and estimation of arterial hepatic flow allowed the estimation of hepatic fluxes. Catheters were implanted into the portal and hepatic veins as well as in the abdominal aorta for the measurement of AA fluxes. Animals fed the LN diet showed more efficient N retention (0.59 of digested N) than did the C and LE diet (0.50 and 0.33, respectively; P < 0.001). The NPA of total AA-N for the LN diet was only 0.60 of the value measured for the control (C) diet (P < 0.01). Despite this, the total estimated AA-N net splanchnic fluxes were not significantly different across the three diets (3.3, 1.9 and 2.6 g total AA-N/day for C, LN and LE, respectively, P = 0.52). Thus, different metabolic regulations must have taken place across the liver between the three experimental diets. A combination of decreased net uptake of total AA-N by the liver of animals in the LN diet (0.61 of the C diet; P = 0.002) and reduced urinary urea-N production (0.52 of the C diet; P = 0.001) spared AA from catabolism in the LN diet relative to the other two diets. For the LE diet, the urinary urea-N output was 1.3 times the value of the C diet (P = 0.01). This may relate to an increased catabolism of AA by the muscle and/or, to a lesser extent, to an increased utilisation of AA for gluconeogenesis in the liver. These effects may explain the reduced whole body protein retention observed with the LE diet.

11.
J Anim Sci ; 88(6): 2122-31, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20228241

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to determine whether subtle changes in the energy-to-N ratio of medium-concentrate diets alters hepatic export protein synthesis and the partition of protein metabolism in the whole body of growing rams. Rams (n = 6; 41.5 +/- 2.6 kg of BW) were fitted with catheters for measurement of Leu and Phe tracer kinetics across the portal drained-viscera (PDV) and liver. Rams were assigned to receive 3 dietary treatments according to a duplicated Latin square design. Animals received forage-concentrate-based diets that were balanced for ME and available N (CON), 20% imbalanced (reduced) in available N (LN), or 20% imbalanced in ME (LE). After 15 d on each experimental diet, [ring-(2)H(5)]Phe (4.3 micromolxkg(-1)xh(-1)) and [1-(13)C]Leu (8.6 micromolxkg(-1)xh(-1)) were continuously infused into the vena cava for 10 h and, over the last 7 h of infusion, matched sets of blood samples were taken. Daily BW gain was less (P < 0.05) for the LE (0.191 kgxd(-1)) diet compared with CON (0.265 kg/d) and LN (258 kgxd(-1)) diets. Compared with CON, whole body irreversible loss rate (ILR) of Leu and Phe was less (10 to 16%, P < 0.02) for LN and LE diets, which for Leu reflected its decreased (20 to 24%, P < 0.05) net PDV absorption. The decreased whole body ILR is due to a decreased PDV ILR in both diets with a relative contribution of the PDV to the whole body ILR decreased (P < 0.05) in the LN (27%) diet compared with the CON (36%) and LE (33%) diets. This decreased PDV ILR was associated with a decreased net Leu PDV uptake in LN and LE diets (-25 and -20%, respectively; P < 0.05). Conversely, the decreased whole body Phe ILR is explained by a decreased hepatic ILR (and contribution to the whole body ILR) and was associated with a decreased net hepatic uptake of Phe in LN (-25%) and LE (-20%) diets compared with CON (P = 0.03). The fractional and absolute synthesis rates of total proteins and albumin were decreased by 10% in LE animals (P < 0.05), whereas they were not affected by the LN diet. These results suggest a specific decreased utilization of Leu at the PDV due to a specific sparing mechanism in the LN diet. Conversely, a decreased Phe utilization occurred in the liver in both diets (due to a decreased export protein synthesis and a probable decreased oxidation in LE diet, whereas only oxidation is reduced in LN diet).


Subject(s)
Energy Intake/physiology , Liver/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Proteins/metabolism , Sheep/metabolism , Animals , Body Weight/physiology , Kinetics , Leucine/blood , Leucine/metabolism , Male , Phenylalanine/blood , Phenylalanine/metabolism , Sheep/growth & development , Splanchnic Circulation/physiology
12.
J Anim Sci ; 87(5): 1747-58, 2009 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19213712

ABSTRACT

The aim of this study was to assess the metabolic fate of AA (endogenous or export protein synthesis, gluconeogenesis, or oxidation) after an imbalanced supply of energy and N in the diet of growing lambs. Eighteen INRA 401 lambs (3 mo old, 29.7 +/- 0.45 kg of BW) were fed 3 experimental diets, one providing a N and energy supply according to recommended allowances (control), one with 23% less N supply relative to energy (LN), and one with 19% less ME supply relative to N (LE). Animals were assigned to 6 blocks of 3, with each animal receiving 1 of the 3 diets, and the animals from each block were slaughtered on the same day. Liver slices from these lambs were incubated in a minimum salt medium (Krebs-Henseleit) containing physiological concentrations of propionate and AA as energy and N sources, similarly across all 3 treatments. Protein synthesis (endogenous and export) using [U-(14)C]valine and [(35)S]methionine, gluconeogenesis from [1-(14)C]propionate and [U-(14)C]alanine, and oxidation were measured. A relative sparing of AA at the liver level was observed with the LN diet because of reduced urinary N (-42%, LN vs. control, P < 0.001). The AA were also directed toward anabolic purposes in the LN diet via an increased endogenous and total export protein synthesis (+51%, LN vs. control, P = 0.01; also observed for fibrinogen synthesis, but not for albumin or transferrin) associated with a tendency for increased gluconeogenesis from alanine (+58%, LN vs. LE, P = 0.08). On the other hand, the LE diet resulted in a marked loss of N in urine (+24%, LE vs. control, P < 0.05), but no notable effect of the LE diet was demonstrated for protein synthesis or gluconeogenesis ex vivo. These data demonstrate a more efficient utilization of AA for anabolic purposes in the lambs fed LN, probably via an activation of some AA transport systems, to address the shortage of nitrogenous nutrients in the LN diet. By contrast, no such adaptation occurred in the LE lambs, probably because the regulatory mechanisms that prevailed in this case were the nutrient supply or hormones, which were not altered in our ex vivo experimental model.


Subject(s)
Diet/veterinary , Energy Metabolism , Gluconeogenesis/physiology , Liver/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Protein Biosynthesis/physiology , Sheep , Amino Acids/metabolism , Animals , Carbon Dioxide/metabolism , Carbon Isotopes/metabolism , Glucose/metabolism , Male , Propionates/metabolism , Sheep/growth & development , Sheep/metabolism
13.
Nutr Res Rev ; 19(2): 161-73, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19079883

ABSTRACT

The liver plays a unique role in nutrient homeostasis. Its anatomical location makes it ideally suited to control the systemic supply of absorbed nutrients, and it is the primary organ that can both consume and produce substantial amounts of glucose. Moreover, it is the site of a substantial fraction (about 25 %) of the body's protein synthesis, and the liver and other organs of the splanchnic bed play an important role in sparing dietary N by storing ingested amino acids. This hepatic anabolism is under the control of hormonal and nutritional changes that occur during food intake. In particular, the route of nutrient delivery, i.e. oral (or intraportal) v. peripheral venous, appears to impact upon the disposition of the macronutrients and also to affect both hepatic and whole-body nutrient metabolism. Intraportal glucose delivery significantly enhances net hepatic glucose uptake, compared with glucose infusion via a peripheral vein. On the other hand, concomitant intraportal infusion of both glucose and gluconeogenic amino acids significantly decreases net hepatic glucose uptake, compared with infusion of the same mass of glucose by itself. Delivery of amino acids via the portal vein may enhance their hepatic uptake, however. Elevation of circulating lipids under postprandial conditions appears to impair both hepatic and whole-body glucose disposal. Thus, the liver's role in nutrient disposal and metabolism is highly responsive to the route of nutrient delivery, and this is an important consideration in planning nutrition support and optimising anabolism in vulnerable patients.

14.
Meat Sci ; 74(4): 658-66, 2006 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22063220

ABSTRACT

Dietary proteins can have biological properties, many attributed to bioactive peptides (2-50 amino acids). Since little is known about peptides in meat, we investigated the postmortem occurrence of low molecular weight peptides (<5kDa) in bovine Pectoralis profundus muscle, after 14 days storage at 4°C and vacuum cooking for 90min at 75°C. The study combined quantitative (amino acid analysis) and qualitative approaches (mass spectrometry). Eighty-nine percent of peptidic amino acids in fresh muscle corresponded to carnosine, anserine and glutathione. Levels of these compounds were lower in cooked meat compared to fresh muscle. Concomitantly, numerous larger compounds, most probably peptides, were generated in a very reproducible manner during ageing and even more during cooking of meat. Seven peptides (fragments of troponin T, nebulin, procollagen and cypher proteins) were identified in cooked meat extracts.

15.
J Dairy Sci ; 87(5): 1389-99, 2004 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15290986

ABSTRACT

Two experiments were conducted to determine the effects of corn particle size (CPS) on site and extent of starch digestion in lactating dairy cows. Animals were fitted with ruminal, duodenal, and ileal cannulas. Dry corn grain accounted for 36% of dry matter intake. In experiment 1, 6 cows were used in a duplicate 3 x 3 Latin square design. Semiflint corn was used. Corn processing methods were grinding, medium rolling, and coarse rolling. The mean particle size of the processed corn was 730, 1807, and 3668 microm, respectively. Rumen digestibility of starch linearly decreased from 59% with ground corn to 36% with coarsely rolled corn. Similarly, small intestine digestibility linearly decreased with increased CPS, and consequently, the amount of starch digested in the small intestine was not affected by corn processing. In experiment 2, 4 cows were used in a 2 x 2 crossover design. Dent corn was used. Corn processing methods were grinding and coarse rolling. The mean particle size of the processed corn was 568 and 3458 microm, respectively. Rumen digestibility of starch decreased from 70% with ground corn to 54% with coarsely rolled corn. Small intestine digestibility of starch was not significantly affected by CPS, and the amount of starch digested in the small intestine tended to be greater for rolled than for ground corn. In both experiments, starch total tract digestibility decreased with increased CPS. In conclusion, CPS is an efficient tool to manipulate rumen degradability of cornstarch. In midlactation cows, the decrease in the amount of starch digested in the rumen between grinding and coarse rolling is partly compensated for by an increase in the amount of starch digested in the small intestine with dent genotype, but with semiflint genotype postruminal digestion is not increased and rumen escape starch is not utilized by the animal.


Subject(s)
Cattle/physiology , Digestion , Lactation , Starch/metabolism , Zea mays , Animals , Duodenum/metabolism , Female , Food Handling/methods , Ileum/metabolism , Particle Size , Rumen/metabolism
16.
Arch Tierernahr ; 56(1): 13-21, 2002 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12389218

ABSTRACT

Two methodologies for the measurement of peptide amino acids (PAA) in blood were compared to evaluate their effects on the measurement of the net flux of peptides across the gastrointestinal tract of sheep. These methods consisted of a chemical deproteinization of blood samples with sulfosalicylic acid (1.6 M, 0.1 ml for 1 ml of sample) or perchloric acid (1 M, 1 ml for 1 ml of sample) followed by ultrafiltration through a 3,000-Da cut-off filter (SSA + UF3 kD) or gel filtration through a Sephadex G-15 column (1,500-Da cut-off filter; PCA + G-15), respectively, prior to PAA analysis. Peptide concentrations as determined by amino acid concentrations before and after hydrolysis of samples were slightly greater with the SSA + UF3 kD (991 microM) than with the PCA + G-15 (605 microM) methodology. However, both methodologies gave similar net portal-drained viscera flux data in sheep fed on alfalfa pellets with histidine as the only significant uptake of peptide amino acid.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/blood , Intestinal Absorption/physiology , Peptides/blood , Sheep/metabolism , Amino Acids/metabolism , Animals , Benzenesulfonates , Hydrolysis , Male , Molecular Weight , Peptides/metabolism , Reproducibility of Results , Salicylates , Sheep/blood , Ultrafiltration/methods , Ultrafiltration/veterinary
17.
J Anim Sci ; 80(5): 1362-74, 2002 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-12019626

ABSTRACT

We assessed the effects of nutrient supply and dietary bulk, both increasing with hay intake, on O2 uptake and nutrient net fluxes across the portal-(PDV) and mesenteric- (MDV) drained viscera, and the rumen in adult ewes. Four ewes, fitted with a ruminal cannula, with catheters in the mesenteric artery, the portal, mesenteric and right ruminal veins, and with a blood flow probe around the right ruminal artery, were used in a 4 x 4 Latin square design. Treatments consisted of 500 g DM/d hay (LL, low bulk and low nutrient supply), 500 g DM/d hay + infused nutrients (LH, low bulk and high nutrient supply), 750 g DM/d hay + infused nutrients (MH, medium bulk and high nutrient supply), and 1,000 g DM/d hay (HH, high bulk and high nutrient supply). Infused nutrients consisted of volatile fatty acids (VFA) and casein dissolved in salts and infused continuously in the rumen to provide the same amount of metabolizable energy (7.6 MJ/d) and digestible protein (63 g/d) for LH, MH, and HH. Both increases in bulk and nutrient supply increased O2 uptake in the MDV and PDV. Dietary bulk stimulated mainly blood flow, whereas nutrient supply stimulated mainly O2 extraction rate. The O2 uptake by the rumen was not significantly affected by hay intake, although blood flow increased due to nutrient supply. Increase in hay intake had no effects on portal net release of lactate and net uptake of glucose but increased VFA, 3-D-hydroxybutyrate, ammonia, and amino acids (AA) net release and urea net uptake across PDV. The increase in portal nutrient net fluxes with hay intake was entirely related to the increase of nutrient supply for VFA, 3-D-hydroxybutyrate, ammonia, and urea, irrespective of the amount of casein infused for AA. Dietary bulk had no effect on total energy net release in the portal vein. We conclude that despite the increase in portal O2 uptake, increasing dietary bulk had no significant impact on portal recovery of energy. In ruminal tissues, which were the main site of energy absorption, O2 uptake appeared low and was not sensitive to dietary manipulation. In contrast, in mesenteric tissues, which contribute poorly to energy absorption with forage diets, O2 uptake appeared high and very sensitive to dietary manipulation.


Subject(s)
Oxygen Consumption/physiology , Rumen/metabolism , Sheep/metabolism , Viscera/metabolism , Absorption , Animal Feed , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Female , Liver Circulation/physiology , Portal System/physiology , Random Allocation , Regional Blood Flow , Splanchnic Circulation/physiology , Viscera/blood supply
18.
Br J Nutr ; 86(6): 707-15, 2001 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11749680

ABSTRACT

In study 1, four cows had a ruminal canula, a catheter in the right ruminal vein and an ultrasonic flow probe around the right ruminal artery; a catheter was placed in the auricular artery on experimental days. Blood samples were taken every 10 min from -20 to 60 min after ruminal infusion of 5.79 mmol pteroylmonoglutamic acid and cyanocobalamin. There was a net release of these vitamins across the rumen wall following the infusion (P=0.06). In studies 2 and 3, four cows had catheters in the portal, one hepatic and two mesenteric veins and one mesenteric artery. Plasma flow was determined using p-aminohippurate. In study 2, blood samples were taken before and every 30 min for 6 h after feeding 0 or 4 mg of pteroylmonoglutamic acid. Flow of folates through the portal-drained viscera (PDV) and the total splanchnic tissues (TSP) tended to increase with the ingestion of pteroylmonoglutamic acid (P=0.19). In study 3, blood samples were collected every 30 min for the first 3 h to calculate plasma flow and basal net fluxes of folates and vitamin B12. The cows were fed 2.6 g pteroylmonoglutamic acid and 500 mg cyanocobalamin; blood samples were taken every 2 h for 24 h. Vitamin supplements increased the net release of folates and vitamin B12 from PDV (P=0.04) and TSP (P=0.13). The present results demonstrate that, in dairy cows, at doses reported to improve animal performance, passage of pteroylmonoglutamic acid to the portal blood appears during the 6 h following its ingestion, whereas for cyanocobalamin, it is a slow process, not yet completed 24 h after its ingestion.


Subject(s)
Cattle/metabolism , Folic Acid/pharmacokinetics , Intestinal Absorption , Liver/metabolism , Vitamin B 12/pharmacokinetics , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Animals , Diet , Dietary Supplements , Female , Folic Acid/blood , Lactation/physiology , Rumen/metabolism , Vitamin B 12/blood
19.
Arch Tierernahr ; 54(4): 281-96, 2001.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11921851

ABSTRACT

Different methodologies for the measurement of peptide amino acid (PAA) in blood and plasma were compared in sheep. Preparation of blood and plasma samples consisted of a deproteinization, either chemical with sulfosalicylic acid (0.04 g for 1 ml of sample) or physical by ultrafiltration (10,000-MW cut-off filters), with or without a subsequent ultrafiltration through a 3,000-MW cut-off filter. Peptide concentrations were determined by quantification of amino acid concentrations before and after acid hydrolysis of samples. Free amino acid concentrations were similar by all the method used (about 2.5 and 2.7 mM, for blood and plasma respectively). Peptide concentrations were higher with chemical deproteinization (10.6 and 4.2 mM, for blood and plasma respectively) than with physical deproteinization (5.7 and 3.3 mM, for blood and plasma respectively). When the deproteinized samples were further treated to remove material of molecular weight above than 3 kDa, peptide concentrations were significantly reduced, which indicates inefficiencies in the ability of the deproteinizing procedures in removing all the proteinaceous materials. Concentration of small PAA (< 3 kDa) in blood was about 1.5-fold that in plasma, mainly due to peptide Gly and Glu derived from the hydrolysis of the erythrocyte glutathione. The choice of a methodology for quantifying circulating peptides is discussed.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/blood , Intestinal Absorption/physiology , Peptides/blood , Sheep/blood , Animals , Benzenesulfonates , Hydrolysis , Male , Molecular Weight , Reproducibility of Results , Salicylates/chemistry , Ultrafiltration/methods
20.
Br J Nutr ; 83(5): 521-31, 2000 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-10953677

ABSTRACT

Four ewes, each fitted with a rumen cannula and with catheters in the mesenteric artery and portal and mesenteric veins, received continuous intrarumen infusions of water or of short-chain fatty acids (SCFA). SCFA infusions were isoenergetic (83 kJ/h) and provided rumen molar proportions (acetate:propionate:butyrate) of 70:20:10, 50:40:10 or 50:20:30. The rumen SCFA production rate with the basal diet was 90.0, 23.1 and 8.8 mmol/h for acetate, propionate and butyrate respectively. Portal net fluxes indicated that 74, 67 and 22-30% of infused acetate, propionate and butyrate respectively, reached the portal vein. Portal net release of beta-hydroxybutyrate increased with SCFA infusions, irrespective of the amount of butyrate infused. Portal net release of lactate decreased with high-butyrate infusion. Portal net uptake of glucose increased with the SCFA infusions. In ewes infused with water, a portal net uptake of total amino acids (AA) was observed. SCFA infusions decreased the uptake of nonessential AA (glutamate, glycine, but not glutamine) and increased the net release of tyrosine and essential AA (isoleucine, leucine). Portal net fluxes of AA were similar with both high-acetate and high-propionate infusions. Lower net uptake of glutamine and net release of most essential AA and some nonessential AA were observed with the high-butyrate infusion. Energetic summation of portal net release was not significantly different between the three SCFA infusions, although it tended to be lower with high-butyrate infusion. This may be related to the higher trophic effect of butyrate on the digestive mucosa.


Subject(s)
Amino Acids/pharmacokinetics , Fatty Acids, Volatile/pharmacology , Gastrointestinal Contents/chemistry , Portal System/physiology , Acetates/blood , Animals , Butyrates/blood , Catheters, Indwelling , Energy Metabolism/physiology , Fatty Acids, Volatile/administration & dosage , Fatty Acids, Volatile/analysis , Female , Lactic Acid/blood , Nutritional Status/physiology , Propionates/blood , Rumen/physiology , Sheep , Viscera/physiology
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