Carb absorption
Nitrogen and protein
Aspects of the diet
Fat aspects
Fat in the diet
100

VFA absorption happens by?

Primarily absorbed through rumen epithelium - smaller proportion in omasum and SI

rumen papillae - surface area

Absorption rate proportional to size of VFA - Butyrate > propionate > acetate

Ionized VFAs can pass through rumen epithelium, must be unionized to pass into blood vessels, CO2 diffusion into epithelial cells

100

Common nitrogen sources are?

True proteins - 60-80%

Nuclear proteins - 10%

Non-protein nitrogen - 5-60% = ammonia and ammonium salts, urea, amides, amines, uric acid

100

bacteria nitrogen metabolism

Deaminate amino acids - ammonia + carbon skeleton, use carbon skeleton for energy 

Amino acids made into microbial protein

Synthesize amino acids from ammonia and carbon skeleton

100

Feeding supplemental fat to? or types?

Palm oil cake - high NDF fat source, acts like fiber source with fat added

Increased milk fat - mechanism not clear

Controversial ingredient - deforestation for palm oil production

100

Fat absorption

No long chain FA are absorbed in the rumen - only VFA

Similar mechanisms are monogastric fat digestion - emulsification by bile salts

Pancreatic lipase is less important - majority of lipids are microbial or FFA

Absorbed into SI mucosa - Packaged in chylomicrons, lacteals -> lymphatic circulation

200

Lactic acid absorption

Small quantities can be absorbed by the rumen

very slow - 10% of the absorption rate of VFAs

Reason = stronger acid - lactic acid has much lower pKa, more ionized at moderate rumen pH, gain overload

200

What is rumen Degradable protein? (RDP)

portion of protein degraded by rumen microbes, only half of total crude protein, bacteria (only 10-40% of species will degrade proteins), protozoa (can utilize dietary protein, generally consume bacteria for protein instead)

200

Non-protein N

Can feed up to 30% of total diet N as NPN

Problems with going to high - palatability, reduces microbial growth -> protein synthesis, energy cost to convert absorbed NH3 to urea

Ammonia toxicity - bovine bonkers, incoordination, salivation, tremors

treatment - NH3 is rapidly absorbed from rumen but NH4+ is not, acidic pH = more NH4+ than NH3, stomach tube with vinegar

200

Hydrolysis is? 

Cleaves ester linkages to glycerol

produces free fatty acids 

85% occurs extracellularly 

primarily performed by bacteria 

inhibited by: high fat content in diet, low rumen pH, ionophores

200

Body fat composition

Monogastrics = more unsaturated FA, unsaturated FA in cis isomer, even chain FA

Ruminants - More saturated FA, unsaturated FA in cis and trans isomers, odd chain FA, branched chain FA

300

Electrolyte absorption

Cl- moves from rumen to bloodstream - pulled by electrical gradient, moves against concentration gradient

Na+ moves from rumen to bloodstream - against both electrical and concentration gradient

K+ moves in both directions - no net difference

Water moves with osmolarity - goes to high solute concentration = normally from rumen to bloodstream

300

What is rumen undegradable protein (RUP)?

Dietary protein not digested by microbes - bypass protein

Sources - certain natural products (dehydrated alfalfa, blood meal), processed protein is treated to protect from microbes (heat treatment, fat encapsulation, formaldehyde denaturation, mineral chelation

Digested by animal in the SI

300

CHO and N balance 

Optimize microbial protein synthesis

requires 3 inputs present at the same time - energy, carbon skeleton, N

Rapidly fermented CHO - require rapidly available N

Slowly fermented CHO - require N that is more slowly digested

300

Biohydrogenation is?

conversion of unsaturated to saturated FA - add H to double bond, reductase

Saturated FA less toxic to bacteria

~15% unsaturated FA are bypass - escape biohydrogenation in rumen

300

Rumen pathologies

Carbohydrate engorgement = grain overload

Sub-acute ruminal acidosis

Bloat

Displaced abomasum 

Nitrate poisoning

400

VFA metabolism

Blood from rumen enters portal vein -> liver

metabolism by liver = butyrate -> b-hydroxybutyrate (energy source for most tissues), propionate (gluconeogenesis, only SCFA that can form glucose), Acetate -> acetyl-CoA (enters TCA cycle - ATP production, fatty acid synthesis)

Produces majority of ruminants energy (20-80%)

Hind gut fermenters = VFAs less important as an energy source

400

Bacteria AA synthesis?

Ammonia + carbon skeleton -> amino acid

requires energy 

Transamination - transfer of amino group from one carbon skeleton to another, can convert non-essential AA to essential AA

400

Lipids in the diet?

Comprise a small portion of the diet - 1-10% of DMI

Plant lipids = leaves, waxes, seeds

Usually unsaturated fatty acids - contain double bonds, mostly i the cis isomer

400

Other microbial metabolism?

Isomer change - cis->trans = more stable, higher melting point

Chain lengthening - add acetate = 2 C to chain

Odd chain FA - odd number of C

Branched chain FA - benefits for heart disease and diabetes

400

What is nitrate poisoning?

Excess nitrates in feed - drought stress, frost damage, over fertilizing

Bacteria convert nitrate to nitrite - more toxic

Normally nitrite is converted to ammonia

high levels = absorption into blood

Binds to hemoglobin to form methemoglobin - reduces O2 carrying capacity, blood turns chocolate brown colour

500

Net energy to the animal through carbs?

Non-structural CHO - sugars, starch, pectin = little direct absorption by animal, microbial fermentation to VFA

Structural CHO - cellulose and hemicellulose = microbial digestion to monosaccharides, monosaccharides fermented to VFA, energy not available to animal without microbial breakdown

500

Ammonia sources? and absorption?

Sources = Non-protein N from feed (nitrates, urea, ammoniated straw), or urea recycling (diffuses from blood into rumen, secreted in saliva)

Absorption = excess ammonia in rumen is absorbed, converted to urea by the liver, excreted by kidneys, diffuses from blood into milk

500

Fats in the diet?

Fats are high in energy but.....

low palatability

fat can coat feed material - not accessible to bacteria to ferment = decrease VFA production, bypass protein/AA/vitamins

Long-chain fatty acids are toxic to bacteria - especially unsaturated Fa

milk fat depression - inhibited by a type of trans FA

Feed can go rancid

500

Microbial lipid use?

Bacteria = not used for energy production, synthesis of cell membrane, inhibits methane production 

Protozoa = Consume and hoard unsaturated FA, released when protozoa are digested in SI, FA remain unsaturated Cis isomers

500

How is this exam gonna go??????

Great!!!!!

We are going to crush it!!!!!

Believe in yourself

M
e
n
u