<b>Intestinal carbohydrase activity and sodium-glucose transporter expression in layers fed diets containing wheat and rice brans supplemented with phytase

  • Ali Asghar Saki Bu-Ali Sina University
  • Alireza Atrian Bu-Ali Sina University
  • Sara Mirzaie Goudarzi Bu-Ali Sina University
  • Gholam Khodakaramian Bu-Ali Sina University
  • Azam Yousefi Bu-Ali Sina University

Resumo

The effect of diets containing wheat and rice brans with or without phytase supplementation on performance, intestinal carbohydrase activities and mRNA expression of sodium-glucose transporter-1 (SGLT-1) in layers was studied. A total of 96 23-wk-old Hy-line W-36 were allocated in a completely randomized experimental design at random with 6 treatments and 4 replicate cages of 4 birds each. A control diet was used in this experiment and then it was formulated to contain 10% wheat bran and 15% rice bran. Then phytase (2 g kg-1; 1000 FTU kg-1) was added to each diet. Feed intake, egg mass, feed conversion ratio, shell weight, shell thickness and Haugh units were not influenced by brans or phytase supplementation (p > 0.05). But egg production decreased in rice bran treatments (p < 0.05). In the jejunum, adding of phytase to control and diet containing wheat bran increased the concentration of sucrase (p ≤ 0.01). Also, addition of phytase to control diet increased (p ≤ 0.001) the mRNA expression of SGLT-1 in the duodenum. It was concluded that feeding layers with diets containing 10% wheat bran were practically feasible without compromising production performance, egg shell quality, and endogenous carbohydrase activity.

 

Downloads

Não há dados estatísticos.
Publicado
2017-04-03
Como Citar
Saki, A. A., Atrian, A., Goudarzi, S. M., Khodakaramian, G., & Yousefi, A. (2017). <b&gt;Intestinal carbohydrase activity and sodium-glucose transporter expression in layers fed diets containing wheat and rice brans supplemented with phytase. Acta Scientiarum. Animal Sciences, 39(2), 157-162. https://doi.org/10.4025/actascianimsci.v39i2.31900
Seção
Nutrição de Não-Ruminantes

0.9
2019CiteScore
 
 
29th percentile
Powered by  Scopus