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The effect of feeding regimen on apparent and true ileal nitrogen digestibility for rats fed diets containing different sources of protein
Author(s) -
James Kerry A C,
Butts Christine A,
Koolaard John P,
Donaldson Helen E,
Scott Margaret F,
Moughan Paul J
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
journal of the science of food and agriculture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.782
H-Index - 142
eISSN - 1097-0010
pISSN - 0022-5142
DOI - 10.1002/jsfa.1151
Subject(s) - biology , meal , casein , food science , soy protein , digestion (alchemy) , fish meal , ileum , soybean meal , zoology , chemistry , biochemistry , fish <actinopterygii> , fishery , raw material , ecology , chromatography
A standard protocol is required for carrying out routine ileal nitrogen (N) digestibility rat bioassays. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of feeding regimen on ileal N digestibility in rats fed diets containing different protein sources and chromic oxide as an indigestible marker. The experimental design was seven diets (protein‐free (PF), enzyme‐hydrolysed casein (EHC), lactalbumin (LAC), wheat gluten (GLU), fish fillets (FIS), soy protein isolate (SOY), zein) by three feeding regimens (frequent, meal, ad libitum ) with 10 rats per diet. In frequent feeding, food was provided for eight 10 min periods between 09:00 and 16:00; in meal feeding, food was provided for one 3 h period at 09:00; in ad libitum feeding, food was available at all times. Rats were fed for 8 days, killed and digesta were collected from the terminal 20 cm of the ileum. The diets and freeze‐dried digesta were then analysed for N and chromium (Cr). There were statistically significant effects of feeding regimen on ileal digesta weight, ileal N/Cr ratio and apparent (AND) and true (PF TND, EHC TND) N digestibility. Mean N digestibilities, averaged over four dietary treatments (LAC, GLU, FIS, SOY), for the frequent, meal and ad libitum feeding regimens respectively were: AND, 88.8, 90.4, 85.8; PF TND, 94.9, 96.4, 97.0; EHC TND, 92.7, 94.0, 95.6. Although the N digestibilities were higher for rats on meal feeding compared with frequent feeding, the only statistically significant differences were for the lactalbumin treatment, and these were small in absolute terms. This study demonstrated that meal feeding was suitable and frequent feeding was unnecessary for most protein sources tested, and that ad libitum feeding was not ideal because of the smaller and more variable quantities of digesta collected and the more variable ileal N/Cr ratios. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry