Abstract

Three in vitro experiments were conducted to determine the efficacy of calf pregastric esterase (PGE) for hydrolyzing various fats and the influence of various factors on its lipolytic activity. Calf PGE was effective in hydrolyzing butterfat and coconut oil, hydrolyzed smaller amounts of the other plant oils tested and had a very limited capacity for lard and the six grades of tallow studied. The esterase retained good lipolytic activity for butterfat over the pH range normally encountered in the calf abomasum after feeding liquid diets. Rennet clotting of reconstituted skim-milk at pH 6.1 reduced enzyme hydrolysis of butterfat by 30%, presumably due to fat occlusion in the clot. Lecithin, skim-milk powder, casein, and lactalbumin markedly increased PGE activity; Ca++ had no effect. The bile salts taurodeoxycholate, glycochenodeoxycholate and taurochenodeoxycholate markedly inhibited PGE lipolysis, whereas others (taurocholate, deoxycholate, cholate, glycocholate) had little or no effect.

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