Abstract

This study investigated the effect of chemical treatments on tannins (condensed and hydrolysable) and on the trypsin inhibitor (TI) activity in salseed meal. Triplicate samples of ground salseed meal (1 kg) were mixed with 820 ml of either distilled water (pH 5.3), 0.67 M acetic acid (pH 2.4), 0.67 M sodium bicarbonate (pH 8.2) or 2% polyvinyl-pyrrolidone (PVP) solution. The material was placed in airtight plastic containers and incubated at 37°C for 0, 3, 6, 12, 24, 48 and 72 h. Samples of untreated salseed meal which had not been subjected to soaking or incubation were run through the analysis to serve as control. Addition of water, acetic acid, sodium bicarbonate and PVP solutions to salseed meal and subsequent anaerobic incubation at 37°C significantly reduced chemically detectable tannins. At each incubation time, alkali solution was more effective than its counterparts. The effect of acidic solution on hydrolysable tannin was least among the treatments. All the treatments reduced TI activity of salseed meal. The reduction in TI activity by these treatments was similar and ranged between 80-84%. Treatment time effected a decrease in the contents of antinutritional substances. However, the effect of the treatment with the reagents, even for zero incubation time, was quite pronounced. It may be concluded from the present results that the treatment of salseed meal with sodium bicarbonate (0.67 M) is more effective in reducing hydrolysable and condensed tannin contents than PVP, water and acid solutions. Treatment with sodium bicarbonate solution is more economical and easier to handle than acid and PVP treatments. Incubation of the treated material for 12 h is reasonably effective, economical and safe from any mould growth.

Highlights

  • Tannins are the polyphenolic compounds with various molecular weights and of varying complexity

  • The exact mechanism of tannin deactivation is not known. These chemical assays do not distinguish between a genuine biological deactivation and mere transformation to a form which does not respond to the chemistry of the assay

  • It is possible that tannin may undergo oxidation under alkaline conditions to be converted to inert forms (Swain, 1965; Reichert et al, 1980)

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Tannins are the polyphenolic compounds with various molecular weights and of varying complexity They are present in a large number of products of vegetable origin used as human foods or animal feeds (Evers et al, 1999; Kamalak et al, 2005; Rana et al, 2006). The presence of salseed meal tannins in the diets of fowl results in lowered digestibility of protein, reduced activities of digestive enzymes (trypsin, chymotrypsin, α-amylase, dipeptidase and disaccharidases) in the gut lumen and increase in the relative weight of the pancreas (Mahmood et al, 1997; Mahmood et al, 2006; Mahmood et al, 2007). This study investigated the effect of chemical treatments on tannins (condensed and hydrolysable) and on the TI activity in salseed meal

MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
CONCLUSIONS
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