Abstract

: This review explores the premise that non-bound (synthetic and crystalline) amino acids are alternatives to soybean meal, the dominant source of protein, in diets for broiler chickens. Non-bound essential and non-essential amino acids can partially replace soybean meal so that requirements are still met but dietary crude protein levels are reduced. This review considers the production of non-bound amino acids, soybeans, and soybean meal and discusses the concept of reduced-crude protein diets. There is a focus on specific amino acids, including glycine, serine, threonine, and branched-chain amino acids, because they may be pivotal to the successful development of reduced-crude protein diets. Presently, moderate dietary crude protein reductions of approximately 30 g/kg are feasible, but more radical reductions compromise broiler performance. In theory, an 'ideal' amino acid profile would prevent this, but this is not necessarily the case in practice. The dependence of the chicken-meat industry on soybean meal will be halved if crude protein reductions in the order of 50 g/kg are attained without compromising the growth performance of broiler chickens. In this event, synthetic and crystalline, or non-bound, amino acids will become viable alternatives to soybean meal in chicken-meat production.

Highlights

  • Chicken-meat is the most rapidly growing source of protein for human consumption [1], which is environmentally advantageous as chicken-meat production generates less ‘greenhouse gases’ or carbon dioxide (CO2 ) equivalents than alternative meat protein sources

  • Diets for broiler chickens may contain more than 200 g/kg protein, the majority of which is derived from soybean meal; the chicken-meat industry has a huge demand for soybean meal

  • This demand can be diminished by inclusions of non-bound amino acids in broiler diets at the expense of soybean meal via the successful development of reduced-crude protein (CP) diets [3]

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Summary

Introduction

Chicken-meat is the most rapidly growing source of protein for human consumption [1], which is environmentally advantageous as chicken-meat production generates less ‘greenhouse gases’ or carbon dioxide (CO2 ) equivalents than alternative meat protein sources. The production of 1 kg of chicken meat will require an input in the order of 560 g soybean meal given a conservative 250 g/kg dietary inclusion of soybean meal and a 2.25:1 conversion of feed into carcass weight This demand can be diminished by inclusions of non-bound (synthetic and crystalline) amino acids in broiler diets at the expense of soybean meal via the successful development of reduced-crude protein (CP) diets [3]. Synthetic and crystalline amino acids are alternatives to soybean meal in chicken-meat production and the purpose of this review is to explore the potential, and the challenges, of substituting non-bound amino acids for soybean meal in reduced-CP diets for broiler chickens. Such an exploration is justified because reduced-CP diets have the potential to halve the demand for soybean meal by the chicken-meat industry

Amino Acid Production Processes
Extraction from Protein Hydrolysates
Chemical Synthesis
Enzymatic Process
Fermentation Process
Soybean Crops and Soybean Meal Production
Reduced-Crude Protein Diets
Amino Acids
The Cost of Deamination
Glycine and Serine
Threonine
Branched-Chain Amino Acids
Lysine
Methionine
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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