Abstract

A six-day experiment was conducted to estimate the relative bioavailability values (RBV) of zinc (Zn) in three organic sources (oZn) with different chelation strengths compared to inorganic ZnSO4 (iZn) for broilers fed a low or high phytate diet. A total of 1080, one-d-old male broiler chicks were randomly assigned to one of 18 dietary treatments (six replicates cages of ten chicks per cage) in a completely randomized design involving a 2×2×4 factorial arrangement with two levels of added phytate (0 or 10g phytate as sodium phytate/kg), two levels of added Zn (30 or 60mg/kg) and four Zn sources (iZn and three oZn sources) plus one low and one high phytate control treatments without Zn addition. The three oZn sources consisted of (1) Zn amino acid with weak chelation strength (ZnAA-L, formation quotient Qf=6.6, containing 119g Zn/kg), (2) Zn proteinate with moderate chelation strength (ZnPRO-M, Qf=30.7, containing 133g Zn/kg) or (3) Zn proteinate with strong chelation strength (ZnPRO-H, Qf=944.0, containing 186g Zn/kg). Chicks were harvested at 6 days of age and pancreas metallothionein (MT) mRNA expression was used to estimate Zn RBV. Pancreas MT mRNA expression increased (P<0.01) as dietary Zn level increased. Chicks fed high phytate diets had lower (P<0.05) MT mRNA expression than chicks fed low phytate diets. Based on multiple linear regression slope ratios with ZnSO4 set at 1.00, the RBV of ZnAA-L, ZnPRO-M and ZnPRO-H were 1.01, 1.28 and 0.70, respectively, for low phytate diets, and 1.05, 1.39 and 0.92, respectively, for high phytate diets. The slope for the oZn source with moderate chelation strength differed (P<0.05) from iZn and the other two oZn sources. The RBV of ZnAA-L, ZnPRO-M and ZnPRO-H under the high phytate diet increased by 0.04, 0.11 and 0.22, respectively, compared to those under the low phytate diet. Results indicate that the oZn sources with moderate or strong chelation strength offer partial or complete resistance to interference from high dietary phytate during digestion; and the oZn with moderate chelation strength had a greater RBV with both low and high phytate diets than iZn or oZn sources with weak or strong chelation strength.

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