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Journal of Mass Spectrometry | 1996

Gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometric comparison of N-acetyl- and N-pivaloyl amino acid esters to measure 15N isotopic abundances in physiological samples: a pilot study on amino acid synthesis in the upper gastro-intestinal tract of minipigs.

Cornelia C. Metges; Klaus-Jürgen Petzke; Ulf Hennig

There is evidence that in animals and also in humans, non-specific nitrogen is used for de novo synthesis of indispensable amino acids by the microflora of the gastro-intestinal tract. Gas chromatography/combustion/isotope ratio mass spectrometry was applied to investigate whether lysine of intestinal origin is available for body protein synthesis. Two minipigs with an end-to-end ileorectal anastomosis received orally equimolar amounts of 15N as ammonium chloride or urea twice a day for 10 days. Samples of blood and ileal digesta were collected before and throughout the 10 days; tissue samples were taken at termination of the experiment. The N-acetyl-n-propyl (NAP)- and N-pivaloyl-i-propyl (NPP)-amino acid esters were evaluated for the determination of the 15N content of lysine and 16 other amino acids ranging from natural abundance to an enrichment of 0.6 APE 15N in a complex mixture of proteinogenic amino acids and several matrices. At natural abundances for all amino acids analysed, NAP and NPP derivatives gave mean precisions of 0.5 and 0.3/1000 delta 15N, respectively. The mean precision for NPP derivatives at enrichments between 0.42 and 1.10 AP 15N ranged between 1.0-15.0/1000 delta 15N. 15N from ammonium chloride was incorporated into lysine and in all other amino acids of serum albumin to a 2.5 times higher degree than from urea. Somewhat lower, but significant, lysine enrichments were detected in liver, duodenum and jejunum. After 10 days of ingestion of 15N-labeled urea a significant 15N enrichment in lysine of serum albumin could not be detected, although lysine in the ileal digesta was significantly labeled by day 5. This is the first report providing evidence that the microflora in the upper gastrointestinal tract of pigs is capable of synthesizing lysine de novo and that this lysine is available for body protein synthesis.


Journal of Animal Science | 2011

Limited and excess dietary protein during gestation affects growth and compositional traits in gilts and impairs offspring fetal growth

Charlotte Rehfeldt; Iris S. Lang; S. Görs; Ulf Hennig; Claudia Kalbe; Bernd Stabenow; Klaus-Peter Brüssow; Ralf Pfuhl; O. Bellmann; Gerd Nürnberg; Winfried Otten; Cornelia C. Metges

The aim of this study was to investigate whether dietary protein intake during gestation less than or greater than recommendations affects gilts growth and body composition, gestation outcome, and colostrum composition. German Landrace gilts were fed gestation diets (13.7 MJ of ME/kg) containing a low (n = 18; LP, 6.5% CP), an adequate (n = 20; AP, 12.1%), or a high (n = 16; HP, 30%) protein content corresponding to a protein:carbohydrate ratio of 1:10.4, 1:5, and 1:1.3, respectively, from mating until farrowing. Gilts were inseminated by semen of pure German Landrace boars and induced to farrow at 114 d postcoitum (dpc; Exp. 1). Energy and protein intake during gestation were 33.3, 34.4, and 35.8 MJ of ME/d (P < 0.001) and 160, 328, and 768 g/d, respectively, in LP, AP, and HP gilts (P < 0.001). From insemination to 109 dpc, BW gain was least in LP (42.1 kg), intermediate in HP (63.1 kg), and greatest in AP gilts (68.3 kg), whereas increase of backfat thickness was least in gilts fed the HP diet compared with LP and AP diets (3.8, 5.1, 5.0 mm; P = 0.01). Litter size, % stillborn piglets, and mummies were unaffected (P > 0.28) by the gestation diet. Total litter weight tended to be less in the offspring of LP and HP gilts (14.67, 13.77 vs. 15.96 kg; P = 0.07), and the percentage of male piglets was greater in litters of HP gilts (59.4%; P < 0.01). In piglets originating from LP and HP gilts, individual birth weight was less (1.20, 1.21 vs. 1.40 kg; P = 0.001) and birth weight/crown-rump length ratio was reduced (45.3, 46.4 vs. 50.7 g/cm; P = 0.003). Colostrum fat (7.8, 7.4 vs. 8.1%) and lactose concentrations (2.2, 2.1 vs. 2.6%) tended to be reduced in LP and HP gilts (P = 0.10). In Exp. 2, 28 gilts (LP, 10; AP, 9; HP, 9) were treated as in Exp. 1 but slaughtered at 64 dpc. At 64 dpc, LP gilts were 7% lighter than AP gilts (P = 0.03), whereas HP gilts were similar to AP gilts. Body composition was markedly altered in response to LP and HP feeding with less lean (P < 0.01) and greater fat content (P = 0.02 to 0.04) in LP and less fat content (P = 0.02 to 0.04) in HP gilts. Fetal litter weight and number, and embryonic survival at 64 dpc were not affected by the diets. These results indicated that gestation diets containing protein at 50 and 250% of recommendations and differing in protein:carbohydrate ratio led to marked changes in protein and fat metabolism in gilts resulting in fetal growth retardation of 15%, which mainly occurred during the second half of gestation.


Archives of Animal Nutrition | 2007

Effect of inulin supplementation on selected gastric, duodenal, and caecal microbiota and short chain fatty acid pattern in growing piglets

Markus Eberhard; Ulf Hennig; Siegfried Kuhla; Ronald M. Brunner; Brigitta Kleessen; Cornelia C. Metges

Abstract We explored whether bifidobacteria and lactobacilli numbers and other selected bacteria in the upper intestine and the caecum of growing pigs were affected by diet and intake of inulin. Starting at two weeks after weaning (28 d) 72 pigs were fed two types of diets (wheat/barley (WB) or maize/gluten (MG)), without or with 3% inulin (WB + I, MG + I) for three and six weeks. Intestinal bacteria were quantified by fluorescence-in-situ-hybridization (n = 8/group). Duration of feeding had no effect on the variables tested, so data for both periods were pooled. Gastric total bacteria amounted to log10 7.4/g digesta. Bifidobacteria were detected in stomach and duodenum two weeks after weaning and disappeared thereafter. In jejunum and caecum bifidobacteria were present at a level of log10 7.0/g digesta. Inulin did not alter numbers of lactobacilli, bifidobacteria, enterococci, enterobacteria and bacteria of the Clostridium coccoides/Eubacterium rectale-group. Inulin disappearance in stomach plus jejunum was higher with the MG diet (73.7 vs. 60.7%, p = 0.013). Caecal acetate was lower in inulin-supplemented diets (p < 0.05) whereas propionate and butyrate were higher in pigs fed the WB diets (p < 0.05). With the WB diet total caecal short chain fatty acids concentration was higher which resulted in a lower pH value (p < 0.05).


PLOS ONE | 2012

Intrauterine growth retarded progeny of pregnant sows fed high protein:low carbohydrate diet is related to metabolic energy deficit.

Cornelia C. Metges; Iris S. Lang; Ulf Hennig; Klaus-Peter Brüssow; Ellen Kanitz; Margret Tuchscherer; Falk Schneider; Joachim M. Weitzel; Anika Steinhoff-Ooster; H. Sauerwein; O. Bellmann; Gerd Nürnberg; Charlotte Rehfeldt; Winfried Otten

High and low protein diets fed to pregnant adolescent sows led to intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR). To explore underlying mechanisms, sow plasma metabolite and hormone concentrations were analyzed during different pregnancy stages and correlated with litter weight (LW) at birth, sow body weight and back fat thickness. Sows were fed diets with low (6.5%, LP), adequate (12.1%, AP), and high (30%, HP) protein levels, made isoenergetic by adjusted carbohydrate content. At −5, 24, 66, and 108 days post coitum (dpc) fasted blood was collected. At 92 dpc, diurnal metabolic profiles were determined. Fasted serum urea and plasma glucagon were higher due to the HP diet. High density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDLC), %HDLC and cortisol were reduced in HP compared with AP sows. Lowest concentrations were observed for serum urea and protein, plasma insulin-like growth factor-I, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, and progesterone in LP compared with AP and HP sows. Fasted plasma glucose, insulin and leptin concentrations were unchanged. Diurnal metabolic profiles showed lower glucose in HP sows whereas non-esterified fatty acids (NEFA) concentrations were higher in HP compared with AP and LP sows. In HP and LP sows, urea concentrations were 300% and 60% of AP sows, respectively. Plasma total cholesterol was higher in LP than in AP and HP sows. In AP sows, LW correlated positively with insulin and insulin/glucose and negatively with glucagon/insulin at 66 dpc, whereas in HP sows LW associated positively with NEFA. In conclusion, IUGR in sows fed high protein∶low carbohydrate diet was probably due to glucose and energy deficit whereas in sows with low protein∶high carbohydrate diet it was possibly a response to a deficit of indispensable amino acids which impaired lipoprotein metabolism and favored maternal lipid disposal.


Archives of Animal Nutrition | 2004

Growth performance, carcass characteristics and bioavailability of isoflavones in pigs fed soy bean based diets

Gerda Kuhn; Ulf Hennig; Claudia Kalbe; Charlotte Rehfeldt; M. Q. Ren; S. Moors; Gisela H. Degen

A growth trial with 38 weaners (castrated male pigs) was designed to compare the growth performance and carcass quality of pigs fed diets containing either soy bean meal or soy protein concentrate in a pair-feeding design. Soy bean meal (SBM) and soy protein concentrate (SPC) differed in isoflavone (daidzein plus genistein) content (782 μg/g in SBM and 125 μg/g in SPC, respectively). During the experiment, all pigs were fed four-phases-diets characterized by decreasing protein concentrations with increasing age (weaner I, weaner II, grower, finisher diets). Rations of control and experimental groups were isoenergetic, isonitrogenous, and isoaminogen. The weanling pigs with an initial live weight of 8.4 ± 1.1 kg were allotted to flat deck boxes. During the growing/finishing period (days 70 – 170 of age), the pigs were housed in single boxes. Both, the weaning and the grower/finishing performances (daily body weight gain, feed intake, feed conversion ratio) were similar in both groups. No differences were found between the groups in carcass composition (percentages of cuts, tissues, and protein/fat), and meat quality of pigs. Moreover, the IGF-1R mRNA expression in longissimus muscle was not influenced by the kind of soy product. However, circulating levels of isoflavones were clearly different between pigs fed SBM (genistein 239 ± 44; daidzein 162 ± 42; equol 12 ± 4 ng/ml plasma) and animals fed SPC (genistein 22 ± 9 and daidzein 8 ± 3, and equol 10 ± 3 ng/ml plasma). The results confirm the expected differences in the bioavailability of soy isoflavones, yet, there were no significant differences in performance of pigs fed either soy bean meal or soy protein concentrate.


Journal of Animal Science | 2013

Effects of low and high protein:carbohydrate ratios in the diet of pregnant gilts on maternal cortisol concentrations and the adrenocortical and sympathoadrenal reactivity in their offspring.

Winfried Otten; Ellen Kanitz; Margret Tuchscherer; Maria Gräbner; Gerd Nürnberg; O. Bellmann; Ulf Hennig; Charlotte Rehfeldt; Cornelia C. Metges

Inadequate maternal nutrition during gestation may cause an adverse environment for the fetus leading to alterations of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) and sympatho-adrenomedullary (SAM) systems later in life. In the present study, we investigated the effects of diets with low and high protein:carbohydrate ratios on cortisol concentrations of pregnant gilts as well as the long-term effects on the function of the HPA and SAM axes in their offspring. Throughout gestation, 33 German Landrace gilts were fed high (HP, 30%), low (LP, 6.5%), or adequate (AP, 12.1%) protein diets, which were made isocaloric by adjusting the carbohydrate content. The salivary cortisol concentrations of the sows were measured in the course of the gestation period. The offspring were cross-fostered, and the plasma cortisol and catecholamine concentrations of the offspring were determined on postnatal d (PND) 1 and 27 and under specific challenging conditions: after weaning (PND 29) and after ACTH and insulin challenges (PND 68 and 70, respectively). Glucocorticoid receptor (GR) binding and neurotransmitter concentrations were measured in stress-related brain regions, and histological analyses of the adrenal were performed. Maternal salivary cortisol concentrations increased throughout gestation (P < 0.001) and the LP gilts had greater salivary cortisol compared with the AP and HP gilts (P < 0.05). No differences between diets were found for cortisol, corticosteroid-binding globulin, and catecholamine concentrations in plasma and for GR binding in hippocampus and hypothalamus in piglets at PND 1 and 27. However, the cortisol response to weaning was increased in LP piglets (P < 0.05), and in HP offspring the basal plasma noradrenaline concentrations were increased (P < 0.05). The cortisol response to the ACTH and the insulin challenge did not differ between diets. On PND 81, an increased adrenal medulla area was observed in LP offspring compared with the AP offspring (P < 0.05). Our results show that maternal diets with aberrant protein:carbohydrate ratios during gestation have moderate long-term effects on the function of the HPA and SAM system in the offspring, which indicates that pigs show a considerable plasticity to cope with maternal malnutrition.


Archives of Animal Nutrition | 2006

Effect of partial dehulling of two- and six-row barley varieties on precaecal digestibility of amino acids in pigs.

Ulf Hennig; Siegfried Kuhla; Wolfgang B. Souffrant; Armin Tuchscherer; Cornelia C. Metges

Abstract Five barrows (German Landrace; initial BW 58 kg, final BW 80 kg) fitted with an ileo-rectal anastomosis were used to determine the effect of partial dehulling and addition of barley hulls of two- and six-row barley varieties on the precaecal digestibility (pD) of CP and amino acids. The following diets were provided according to a standardized diet formulation and tested in seven consecutive periods (repeated group-period design): two-row barley (TRB) + casein (C), dehulled TRB + C, TRB + C + 10% hulls, six-row barley (SRB) + C, dehulled SRB + C, SRB + C + 1% hulls, and wheat starch + C. The diets were supplied at daily rates of 79 – 86 g DMI · kg BW−0.75 in barley containing diets and at 49 g DMI · kg BW−0.75 in the casein diet. The digestibility of amino acids in barley varieties was determined by the difference method (casein as basal diet) using quantitative digesta collection. In both varieties of barley the pD of CP and amino acids did not differ. The pD of CP was unchanged in regard to the treatments in both barley varieties. Due to dehulling in TRB the pD was improved significantly for most indispensable amino acids and in SRB for Met and Cys. Addition of 10% hulls to TRB led to equivalent pD of Arg, His, Leu, Tyr, and Trp compared to TRB, but the pD of Lys, Phe, Thr and Val was significantly decreased below the levels of TRB. Addition of even 1% hulls to SRB impaired the pD of Lys below the level in SRB. In conclusion, addition of barley hulls to pig diets impairs amino acids absorption in the small intestine. The pD values, measured under standardized experimental conditions (without a correction using basal endogenous amino acids), are similar to the values of true digestibility published by NRC (1998).


Archives of Animal Nutrition | 2007

Studies on persisting effects of soy-based compared with amino acid-supplemented casein-based diet on protein metabolism and oxidative stress in juvenile pigs

Peter Junghans; Manfred Beyer; Michael Derno; Klaus J. Petzke; Ulrich Küchenmeister; Ulf Hennig; W. Jentsch; Manfred Schwerin

Abstract Juvenile growing pigs were studied to explore whether a soy-based diet can induce persistent physiological alterations, especially in protein and energy metabolism, nutrient oxidation and redox homeostasis. In former studies we have shown that in juvenile pigs chronically fed protein diets based on either casein (CAS) or soy protein isolate (SPI), the SPI diet significantly decreases growth rate and increases oxidative stress responsiveness as compared to CAS. In addition, here we show that chronic feeding of SPI vs. CAS diet decreases whole body protein synthesis (WBPS) (p = 0.007) and hepatic gene expression associated with protein synthesis. To study persistent SPI effects, a three-period feeding experiment was designed: In the test group 18 pigs received the CAS diet for 24 days (period 1), followed by 31 days on the SPI diet (period 2) and further 31 days on the CAS diet (period 3). In the control group 18 pigs were fed the CAS diet throughout the three periods (86 days). Temporary consumption of SPI diet results in persistent changes of protein metabolism and oxidative stress responsiveness. After switching back from SPI to CAS diet the decrease of WBPS of the test group vs. control group was of borderline significance (p = 0.061), transcript levels of hepatic gene expressions of leucine aminopeptidase, endopeptidase 24.16, glutathione-S-transferase and peptide methionine sulfoxide reductase were increased. In liver tissue, total glutathione was increased and thiobarbituric acid reactive substances were decreased in the test vs. control group. In conclusion, results suggest that SPI-induced changes in protein and amino acid metabolism as well as in redox homeostasis and antioxidative potential in growing pigs persist 4 weeks after the cessation of SPI feeding.


Archives of Animal Nutrition | 1993

Untersuchungen zur präzäkalen verdaulichkeit von mais, sonnenblumen‐ baumwoll‐, lein‐ und sojaextraktionsschrot bei schweinen mit ileorektal‐anastomosen

Ulf Hennig; J. Wünsche; W.B. Souffrant; G. Peters; Kreienbring F

An je 5 Schweinen mit End‐zu‐Seit (E.z.S.)‐ bzw. End‐zu‐End (E.z.E.)‐ Ileorektalanastomosen (IRA) unter Erhaltung der Ileozakal‐Klappen wurden Mais und die Extraktionsschrote (ES) von Sonnenblumensaat, Baumwollsaat, Leinsaat sowie von Sojabohnen sowohl als alleinige Proteinquelle als auch in Mischungen aus Mais und jeweils einem Extraktionsschrot verabreicht, um den Einflus der beiden IRA‐Varianten auf die prazakale Nahrstoff‐ und Aminosauren (AS)‐ Verdaulichkeit zu prufen. Bei zwei der funf Einzelproteinrationen und bei drei der vier Mischrationen traten in derE.z.S.‐IRA‐Gruppe gesichert hohere Verdaulichkeiten fur die Rohkohlenhydrate auf. Bei Rohprotein und Rohfett gab es zwischen den IRA‐Varianten keine Unterschiede. Die AS‐Resorption der Einzelkomponenten Mais, Sonnenblumen‐ES und Baumwollsaat‐ES war von der IRA‐Methode unbeeinflust. Bei Leinsaat‐ES waren die Resorptionswerte fur Isoleuzin, Leuzin und Valin in der E.z.S.‐ IRA‐Variante um ≥5 %‐Einheiten signifikant hoher als in der E.Z.E.‐IRA‐ Gruppe;...


Journal of Nutrition | 2006

Inulin Alters the Intestinal Microbiota and Short-Chain Fatty Acid Concentrations in Growing Pigs Regardless of Their Basal Diet

Gunnar Loh; Markus Eberhard; Ronald M. Brunner; Ulf Hennig; Siegfried Kuhla; Brigitta Kleessen; Cornelia C. Metges

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Cornelia C. Metges

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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Cornelia C. Metges

Massachusetts Institute of Technology

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