Abstract

Six litters of newborn crossbred piglets were utilized to examine 1) the effects of substituting 20% of the protein of an all-milk protein liquid diet with a soy protein isolate (milk-soy diet) on small intestinal variables and 2) the effects of supplementing this milk-soy diet with 25 g of either putrescine or ethylamine per kilogram diet on small intestinal variables. Small intestinal xylose absorption tended to increase from wk 1 to wk 2 of age in pigs fed the milk, putrescine and ethylamine diets, but not in pigs fed the milk, putrescine and ethylamine diets, but not in pigs fed the unsupplemented milk-soy diet. Crypt depth in pigs fed the milk-soy diet tended to be less (9.4%; P greater than .10) than the crypt depth in pigs fed the other diets, but mitotic index was not different (P greater than .10) among diets. Mucosal protein, DNA and RNA concentrations and mucosal brush border sucrase and cytosolic dipeptidase activities tended to be least in pigs fed the putrescine and ethylamine diets. Concentration of mucosal putrescine was greatest (P less than .002) in the distal regions of the small intestine of pigs fed putrescine. Mucosal ornithine decarboxylase activity was inhibited by putrescine (P less than .02), but it was not affected by the soybean protein isolate used in this study. Supplementing soy protein isolate diets with amines may enhance intestinal absorption and enterocyte proliferation.

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