Abstract

Previous studies have shown that the activities of the hepatic enzymes xanthine dehydrogenase and nucleoside phosphorylase, as well as the uric acid excreted, can be used to determine the quality of the protein consumed in chickens, in a short time and using a small amount of the test protein. A common observation in protein quality evaluation is that the food intake of the control animals is considerably greater than that observed in those receiving proteins of low quality. Since this can affect the results, this study measured the quality of garbanzo bean and black bean proteins in chickens fed these beans ad libitum, feeding the bean diets at the level observed in the controls (soy protein+methionine) by enteral intubation or pair feeding the controls with the amount of food consumed by the chickens receiving the bean diets. In every case, protein quality was determined by protein efficiency ratio, net protein utilisation or the biochemical methods used in this study. The results showed that, when fed ad libitum, the animals assigned to the bean diets exhibited a lower food intake than the controls but, by tube feeding, food intake was made equal in both groups. Equal consumption, between these groups, was also obtained by reducing the amount of food offered to the controls to the levels measured in the groups assigned to the bean diets (pair feeding). These feeding strategies had a marked effect on growth, carcass protein content, protein catabolism and also in the results of protein quality. Thus, the control whose intake was reduced grew less, accumulated less protein in tissues and catabolised more of the protein consumed than the control fed ad libitum. In contrast, the chickens assigned to the bean diets, but whose food intake was increased by tube feeding, grew better, accumulated more protein in tissues and catabolised less protein. In general, the results of these experiments confirm the effectiveness of the biochemical methods for estimating protein quality and indicate that the protein quality of both garbanzo beans and black beans increased when it was measured at a food intake equivalent to that measured in the control animals. Since the overall purpose of this study was to evaluate techniques for protein quality determination meant to be applicable to humans nutrition rather than poultry nutrition, single proteins were used instead of combinations of proteins. © 1998 Society of Chemical Industry.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call