Abstract

Abstract A series of in vitro experiments simulating liquid feeding were performed to evaluate the effect of microbial phytase addition, heat-treatment and soaking time on degradation of phytate and lower inositol phosphates when soaking compound wheat/soybean meal diets or the single feedstuffs wheat or soybean meal. The effect of phytase addition on phytate degradation was greatest in soybean meal, almost intermediate for wheat/soybean meal diets and not detectable in wheat, which might be due to a better accessibility to phytate in soybean meal compared with wheat. Heat-treatment seemed to enhance the accessibility between phytase and phytate, whereby phytate degradation was stimulated. Additionally, it was shown that wheat phytase is able to stimulate degradation of phytate in soybean meal. Independent of treatment, the amount of IP5–IP2 was extremely small in relation to phytate in both wheat and soybean meal, indicating that when one phosphate group is removed from the phytate complex, degradation of IP5–IP2 is completed. Consequently, it is anticipated that liquid feeding might result in a higher digestibility of plant P compared with dry feeding of pigs.

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