Effects of a nonspecific nitrogen deficiency on growth rate and leg problems in chicks
Five experiments were conducted using crystalline amino acid and semipurified diets containing adequate levels of all indispensable amino acids, vitamins, and minerals to study the effects of dispensable amino acids on growth and the incidence of leg abnormalities of male chicks. Purified diets cont...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Poultry science 1984-02, Vol.63 (2), p.344-353 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Five experiments were conducted using crystalline amino acid and semipurified diets containing adequate levels of all indispensable amino acids, vitamins, and minerals to study the effects of dispensable amino acids on growth and the incidence of leg abnormalities of male chicks. Purified diets containing 5% L-glutamic acid as the sole source of nonspecific nitrogen resulted in poor growth and feed efficiency, high mortality, and a high incidence of leg abnormalities with many severe cases of this condition. Increasing the dietary level of L-glutamic acid to 10% of the purified diet or supplementing the 5% L-glutamic acid diet with 2.40% glycine or 1.68% L-serine improved weight gain but did not eliminate the leg conditions. Higher L-serine (3.36%) resulted in a growth depression, indicating that this level was toxic to the birds. It was necessary to increase the dietary L-glutamic acid to 12.5% to reduce the incidence of leg problems to a minimum. Plasma dispensable amino acid levels (aspartic acid, glutamic acid, and alanine) paralleled the levels of L-glutamic acid in the diets fed to the chicks. Plasma serine and glycine levels were increased by adding either serine or glycine, but the magnitude of the increase of either amino acid was greatest with the addition of that amino acid to the diet. Plasma proline concentrations increased when chick diets were supplemented with high levels of glycine (2.4%), serine (3.36%), or glutamic acid (9.7%) in relation to those supplemented with only 5% L-glutamic acid. Feeding an intact protein (isolated soybean protein) diet did not alleviate leg disorders, although it did improve weight gain. |
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ISSN: | 0032-5791 1525-3171 |
DOI: | 10.3382/ps.0630344 |