4.7 Review

In Vitro Methods of Assessing Protein Quality for Poultry

Journal

ANIMALS
Volume 10, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ani10040551

Keywords

dietary protein; poultry; digestibility assay; in vitro; pH stat method; pepsin digestibility assay

Funding

  1. Government of Canada Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Industrial Research Chair Program [IRCSA 452664-12]
  2. Aviagen
  3. Canadian Poultry Research Council
  4. Chicken Farmers of Saskatchewan
  5. NSERC
  6. Ontario Poultry Industry Council
  7. Prairie Pride Natural Foods Ltd.
  8. Saskatchewan Egg Producers
  9. Saskatchewan Hatching Egg Producers
  10. Saskatchewan Turkey Producers
  11. Sofina Foods Inc.
  12. University of Saskatchewan
  13. Government of Canada Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Industrial Research Chair Program

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Simple Summary Over the years, broiler chickens have been selected for rapid growth which makes them very efficient at depositing body protein in a short period of time. This is important since the broiler sector is expected to contribute to the growing global demand for poultry meat. In light of this, the quality of proteins fed to poultry is becoming more important. The concept of protein nutrition is based on the sequential process through which proteins are digested, and the amino acids are absorbed and become available for metabolic processes. The nutritional quality of protein ingredients for poultry is based on their amino acid bioavailability. Animal and plant ingredients are the main sources of protein used in poultry diets and they vary in digestibility and amino acid composition. Although in vivo digestibility assays for poultry are available, they are expensive and time consuming to conduct. In vivo digestibility assays are the optimum tools for characterizing protein sources to be used in commercial production, but it is not always practical to conduct these assays in commercial settings. Commercial production, therefore, relies on the use of other assays such as in vitro assays to evaluate the quality of protein sources. Abstract Protein quality assessment of feed ingredients for poultry is often achieved using in vitro or in vivo testing. In vivo methods can be expensive and time consuming. Protein quality can also be evaluated using less expensive and time consuming chemical methods, termed in vitro. These techniques are used to improve the user's efficiency when dealing with large sample numbers, and some mimic the physiological and chemical characteristics of the animal digestive system to which the ingredient will be fed. The pepsin digestibility test is the in vitro method of choice for quick evaluation of protein sample during quality control and in most research settings. Even though the pepsin digestibility test uses enzymes to liberate the amino acids from the protein, it does not mimic normal in vivo digestive conditions. The results obtained with this method may be misleading if the samples tested contain fats or carbohydrates which they often do. Multi-enzyme tests have been proposed to overcome the problem encountered when using the pepsin digestibility test. These tests use a combination of enzymes in one or multiple steps customized to simulate the digestive process of the animal. Multi enzyme assays can predict animal digestibility, but any inherent biological properties of the ingredients on the animal digestive tract will be lost.

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