Abstract

The activity of ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), an enzyme associated with cellular growth and protein synthesis, was examined in breast muscle, liver, and intestinal tissues of turkeys during a short-term period of feed withdrawal (FW) and following refeeding. Turkeys from a randombred control line were reared under standard management practices to 3 wk of age in battery brooders. Feed was then withdrawn from FW birds for a 48-h period, after which feed was consumed ad libitum. Control birds consumed feed ad libitum throughout the test period. Tissues were collected from 12 birds per treatment following 24 and 48 h of FW and at 6, 12, 24, and 48 h following refeeding for later determination of tissue ODC activity. Activity of ODC was greater in tissue from the small intestine than in liver tissue and both had greater activity than that exhibited by breast muscle. Short-term FW and refeeding produced differential responses in ODC activity of the three tissues examined. Feed withdrawal resulted in a reduction of ODC activity in intestinal tissue, whereas activity was unaffected for liver or breast muscle tissues. Compensatory increases in ODC activity were observed in liver and intestinal tissues; however, the increase was both more rapid and transitory in small intestine than in liver tissue. The ODC activity in breast muscle was largely unaffected by short-term FW and refeeding. Patterns of ODC activity in liver during FW and refeeding closely resembled patterns observed for absolute and relative liver weight. Thus, the results of the present experiment demonstrate that short-term FW and refeeding influence underlying growth mechanisms of supply organs, such as hepatic and intestinal tissue, in addition to affecting overall growth and muscle development.

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