Abstract

The objectives of this study were: (1) To investigate the effects of conditioning temperature (70, 80, 90°C), time (30, 60 sec), and interaction (temperature × time) during the pelleting process on internal protein molecular structure changes of the co-products; (2) To identify differences in protein molecular structures among pellets that were processed under different conditions, and between unprocessed mash and pellets; 3) To quantify protein molecular structure changes in relation to predicted energy and protein utilization in dairy cows. The final goal of this program was to show how processing conditions changed internal feed structure on a molecular basis and how molecular structure changes induced by feed processing affected feed milk value in dairy cows. The hypothesis in this study was that processing-induced protein inherent structure changes affected energy and protein availability in dairy cattle and the sensitivity and response of protein internal structure to the different pelleting process conditions could be detected by advanced molecular spectroscopy. The protein molecular structures, amides I and II, amide I to II ratios, α-helix structure, β-sheet structure, and α to β structure ratios, were determined using the advanced vibrational molecular spectroscopy (ATR-FT/IR). The energy values were determined using NRC2001 summary approach in terms of total digestible nutrients, metabolizable and net energy for lactation. The protein and carbohydrate subfactions that are related to rumen degradation characteristics and rumen undegraded protein supply were determined using updated CNCPS system. The experiment design was a RCBD and the treatment design was a 3x2 factorial design. The results showed that pelleting induced changes in protein molecular structure. The sensitivity and response of protein inherent structure to the pelleting depended on the conditioning temperature and time. The protein molecular structure changes were correlated (P < 0.05) with energy values and protein subfractions of the pelleted co-product. The results indicated that the protein internal molecular structure had significant roles in determining energy and protein nutritive values in dairy cows. Multi-regression study with model variables selection showed that the energy and protein profiles in pelleted co-products could be predicted with the protein molecular structure profiles. This approach provides us a relatively new way to estimate protein value in dairy cows based on internal protein molecular structure profile.

Highlights

  • Bio-energy production resulted in millions of tonnes of different types of co-products such as carinata meal, canola meal and distiller’s dried grains with solubles [1,2,3,4,5,6,7].It is important to reveal and understand how processing affects inherent structures of these co-products in relation to nutrient utilization and availability in dairy cattle for accurate diet formulation

  • Samples conditioned at 70 ̊C had highest amide II area among the Structural changes on a molecular basis of canola meal by pelleting samples conditioned at different temperatures

  • Samples conditioned for 30s were lower in amide II area than those conditioned for 60s (1.92 vs. 2.10; P < 0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

It is important to reveal and understand how processing affects inherent structures of these co-products in relation to nutrient utilization and availability in dairy cattle for accurate diet formulation. Conventional chemical analysis can only reveal how the processing affects total chemical composition of co-products, but it cannot reveal inherent structural changes induced by the processing. Conventional feed evaluation by using wet chemistry with harsh chemical reagents always destroys inherent molecular structure of feeds [8]. To fully understand the effect of pelleting under different conditions on nutrient digestion of co-products from bio-oil/bio-fuel processing, we rely on information of total chemical composition changes during the processing and information of how inherent structure changes induced by the processing on a molecular basis [9,10,11,12]

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