AI Article Synopsis

  • Dietary manipulation, specifically reducing crude protein (CP) while increasing soluble protein (SP) levels, can significantly lower the environmental nitrogen footprints of ruminants like sheep.
  • In a study with 32 male Hu sheep, diets with a 10% reduction in CP and various SP levels resulted in lower plasma nitrogen waste and changes in gut microbiota linked to better energy metabolism.
  • Increased levels of soluble protein (25-30% of CP) led to improved nitrogen absorption and reduced markers of reactive nitrogen production, suggesting a promising approach for optimizing ruminant diets and minimizing environmental impacts.

Article Abstract

Dietary nutrient manipulation (e.g. protein fractions) could lower the environmental footprints of ruminants, especially reactive nitrogen (N). This study investigated the impacts of dietary soluble protein (SP) levels with decreased crude protein (CP) on intestinal N absorption, hindgut N metabolism, fecal microbiota and metabolites, and their linkage with N metabolism phenotype. Thirty-two male Hu sheep, with an age of six months and an initial BW of 40.37 ± 1.18 kg, were randomly assigned to four dietary groups. The control diet (CON), aligning with NRC standards, maintained a CP content of 16.7% on a dry matter basis. Conversely, the experimental diets (LPA, LPB, and LPC) featured a 10% reduction in CP compared with CON, accompanied by SP adjustments to 21.2%, 25.9%, and 29.4% of CP, respectively. Our results showed that low-protein diets led to significant reductions in the concentrations of plasma creatinine, ammonia, urea N, and fecal total short-chain fatty acids (SCFA) ( < 0.05). Notably, LPB and LPC exhibited increased total SCFA and propionate concentrations compared with LPA ( < 0.05). The enrichment of the genus in fecal microbiota associated with energy metabolism and amino acid (AA) biosynthesis pathways was evident with SP levels in low-protein diets of approximately 25% to 30%. Moreover, LPB and LPC diets demonstrated a decrease in fecal -N and -N contents as well as urease activity, compared with CON ( < 0.05). Concomitantly, reductions in fecal glutamic acid dehydrogenase gene (), nitrite reductase gene (), and nitric oxide reductase gene () abundances were observed ( < 0.05), pointing towards a potential reduction in reactive N production at the source. Of significance, the up-regulation of mRNA abundance of AA and peptide transporters in the small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, and ileum) and the elevated concentration of plasma AA (e.g. arginine, methionine, aspartate, glutamate, etc.) underscored the enhancement of N absorption and N efficiency. In summary, a 10% reduction in CP, coupled with an SP level of approximately 25% to 30%, demonstrated the potential to curtail reactive N emissions through fecal enrichment and improve intestinal energy and N utilization efficiency.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11260031PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aninu.2024.04.003DOI Listing

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