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Journal of Animal Science, Vol 71, Issue 6 1648-1656, Copyright © 1993 by American Society of Animal Science
JOURNAL ARTICLE |
M. N. Streeter, G. M. Hill, D. G. Wagner, F. N. Owens and C. A. Hibberd
Department of Animal and Dairy Science, University of Georgia, Athens 30602-2771.
The effects of sorghum type on amino acid digestion were determined by feeding heifers (230 kg) equipped with ruminal, duodenal, and ileal cannulas bird-resistant (BR) or non-BR grains that had a normal or waxy endosperm (NORMAL-BR, WAXY-BR, NORMAL, WAXY). Dry-rolled grain diets were fed at 2% of BW in a 4 x 4 Latin square design. Total (TAA), essential (EAA), and nonessential (NAA) amino acid intake (grams/day) tended to be greater for BR than for non-BR grains. Feed (plus endogenous) amino acids reaching the duodenum were calculated by subtracting amino acids of microbial protein from total flow. Flow (grams/day) of total and feed TAA, EAA, NAA, and proline-rich-protein (sum of aspartate, glutamate, glycine, and proline) to the duodenum was greater (P < .05) for BR than for non-BR grains. The ratio between feed proline-rich-protein and NAA reaching the duodenum was similar to that noted with feed intake. Amino acid disappearance (grams/day) from the small intestine was unchanged (P > .10) by sorghum type, although the digestibility (percentage of duodenal flow) of TAA, EAA, NAA, and most individual amino acids was decreased (P < .05) for BR varieties. Amino acid flow to the cecum (grams/day) was generally greater for NORMAL-BR than for WAXY-BR (P < .10) or for NORMAL (P < .01) and greater (P < .10) for WAXY-BR than for WAXY.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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