Abstract

Four experiments were conducted to investigate if the degree of activation of the microsomal mixed-function oxidase (MFO) system was related to the degree of growth depression associated with the addition of monensin to the diet The experiments were conducted with broiler chicks in battery brooders in which the chicks were fed diets of various composition and containing monensin at 0 to 160 ppm. In all experiments, the activity of the MFO system was estimated by the change in the content of cytochrome P-450 in the hepatic microsomes. Activities of some microsomal enzymes were also measured in some of the experiments. Feeding a diet with 24% protein containing fish meal, alfalfa meal, and torula yeast significantly increased the activity of the MFO system in comparison with feeding an isonitrogenous and isoenergetic corn and soybean diet, but there was no difference between the diets in the toxicity of monensin as measured by growth rate. Supplementing a 16% protein but not a 24% protein diet with monensin significantly reduced growth rate. In none of the four experiments was there a statistically significant change in the hepatic content of cytochrome P-450 as a result of feeding monensin. Thus, variation in the magnitude of growth depression caused by monensin indiets of different protein concentration or ingredient composition does not appear to be explained on the relative degree of the activation of the MFO system.

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