Investigation of feeding betaine as an osmoprotectant in broiler chicks

2007 ◽  
Vol 2007 ◽  
pp. 242-242
Author(s):  
Shirin Honarbakhsh ◽  
Mojtaba Zaghari ◽  
Mahmood Shivazad

Trimethylglycine has two primary metabolic roles: it is a methyl group donor and an osmolyte that assists in cellular water homeostasis. Tissues that rely on zwitterionic betaine as an osmolyte include the intestines, kidney, liver, brain and leukocytes. Osmolytes are particularly important in situations in which cellular dehydration is present because these compounds help minimize water loss despite a prevailing osmotic gradient. Thus, water balance homeostasis is an important factor for cells exposed to a variety of osmotic conditions (Klasing et al., 2002). For example, the osmotic pressure of the intestinal contents varies during the process of digestion. The osmotic difference between the intestinal epithelium and the luminal fluid is likely to necessitate means to control the osmotic pressure inside the intestinal epithelial cells. Betaine, as an organic compatible osmolyte, is one of the most likely candidates for the task.

1989 ◽  
Vol 93 (2) ◽  
pp. 201-210 ◽  
Author(s):  
F S Cohen ◽  
W D Niles ◽  
M H Akabas

Phospholipid vesicles fuse with a planar membrane when they are osmotically swollen. Channels in the vesicle membrane are required for swelling to occur when the vesicle-containing compartment is made hyperosmotic by adding a solute (termed an osmoticant). We have studied fusion using two different channels, porin, a highly permeable channel, and nystatin, a much less permeable channel. We report that an osmoticant's ability to support fusion (defined as the magnitude of osmotic gradient necessary to obtain sustained fusion) depends on both its permeability through lipid bilayer as well as its permeability through the channel by which it enters the vesicle interior. With porin as the channel, formamide requires an osmotic gradient about ten times that required with urea, which is approximately 1/40th as permeant as formamide through bare lipid membrane. When nystatin is the channel, however, fusion rates sustained by osmotic gradients of formamide are within a factor of two of those obtained with urea. Vesicles containing a porin-impermeant solute can be induced to swell and fuse with a planar membrane when the impermeant bathing the vesicles is replaced by an isosmotic quantity of a porin-permeant solute. With this method of swelling, formamide is as effective as urea in obtaining fusion. In addition, we report that binding of vesicles to the planar membrane does not make the contact region more permeable to the osmoticant than is bare lipid bilayer. In the companion paper, we quantitatively account for the observation that the ability of a solute to promote fusion depends on its permeability properties and the method of swelling. We show that the intravesicular pressure developed drives fusion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 99 (Supplement_3) ◽  
pp. 264-264
Author(s):  
Foluke A Aderemi

Abstract This study investigated substituting groundnut cake with wheat bran mixed with cattle blood at ratio1:1 in broilers and it lasted for eight weeks. Seventy-five broiler chicks were allotted randomly to five treatment replicated thrice. Control had 15% GNC, 0% blood meal wheat bran (BMWB) in diets II -V GNC was replaced with BMWB at graded levels of 25,50,75 and 100%. Results revealed that body weight gain and feed intake of diets II and III were similar and (P = 0.05) higher than other diets at both phases. Feed efficiency of diet II was better than others at the starter phase while diet III was better at finisher phase. Haematology and serum chemistry at the finisher phase showed that heamoglobin, white blood cell lymphocyte heterophil and plasma of the birds fed diets II, III, IV and V were (P < 0.05) higher than those on control. The kidney liver and spleen histopathology revealed hepatic and renal degeneration, necrosis and inflammatory responses in diets IV and V. Carcass characteristics showed the wings shanks drumstick leg heart and spleen of birds on BMWB were higher than control. Conclusively it seems BMWB could replace GNC without adverse effect on the broilers at 25% inclusion level


1994 ◽  
Vol 77 (1) ◽  
pp. 184-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Fukue ◽  
V. B. Serikov ◽  
E. H. Jerome

Two routes by which interstitial pulmonary edema liquid may leave the lung during recovery are reabsorption into the pulmonary circulation and clearance by lung lymphatics. We hypothesized that reabsorption of edema liquid of low protein concentration into the pulmonary circulation would be greater than reabsorption of edema liquid of high protein concentration because of the greater protein osmotic gradient in the former. On the basis of previous studies, lymph flow should contribute minimally to the recovery. In 22 in situ perfused sheep lungs with lymph fistulas, we produced approximately 100 g of osmotic or hydrostatic edema (low protein) or increased leakiness edema by calcium depletion (high protein). To induce reabsorption, we changed the perfusate from low- (1% albumin, osmotic pressure = 4 cmH2O) to high-protein (7% albumin, osmotic pressure = 22 cmH2O) solution in the osmotic group, decreased capillary pressure from 29 +/- 9 to 11 +/- 6 cmH2O in the hydrostatic group, or reversed leakiness by adding CaCl2 to the perfusate in the increased leakiness group. Reabsorption occurred only during recovery from osmotic (40 +/- 22% of filtered liquid) and hydrostatic (15 +/- 11%) edema. Total lung lymph flow during recovery from osmotic, hydrostatic, or increased leakiness edema was 4.9 +/- 3.4, 4.3 +/- 3.4, or 3.5 +/- 1.9 g, respectively. We conclude that during recovery from pulmonary edema interstitial liquid is reabsorbed into the circulation in inverse proportion to its protein concentration. We confirm that only a small fraction of the interstitial edema liquid is cleared by the lymphatics during recovery from any type of edema.


1961 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-34
Author(s):  
KANDULA PAMPAPATHI RAO ◽  
R. RAMACHANDRA

Acclimatization of the freshwater field crab, Paratelphusa, to high temperature results in a decrease in the chloride, free amino acids and osmotic pressure of the blood. Following similar acclimatization the freshwater mussel, Lamellidens marginalis unlike the crab, shows a considerable increase in the blood chloride as well as the free amino acids, while the total osmotic pressure increases relatively little. These results are discussed and it is suggested that the ionic and osmotic gradient between the milieu intérieur and the protoplasm of the cells might be important in the metabolic compensation to temperature.


Author(s):  
S. T. Petersen ◽  
J. Wiseman ◽  
M. Bedford

It is generally considered that increased digesta viscosity is one mode of action by which antinutritional factors such as β-glucans in barley and arabinoxylans in wheat reduce digestibility of nutrients in broilers. The increased viscosity interferes, possibly, with the activity of digestive enzymes and subsequent movement of nutrients prior to absorption, therefore ultimately depressing growth rate and feed conversion. Experimental diets are usually fed for approximately three weeks prior to evaluation of gut viscosity. However viscosity may change considerably during and after this time to a degree which may be influenced by the feeding regime employed. Accordingly, the current series of experiments was designed to identify the pattern of change of gut viscosity as influenced by age of bird (15 to 45 days) and feeding regime when diets based on wheat and barley were offered.


2000 ◽  
Vol 20 (5) ◽  
pp. 557-565 ◽  
Author(s):  
Watske Smit ◽  
Dirk R. De Waart ◽  
Dirk G. Struijk ◽  
Raymond T. Krediet

Background Glycerol is a low molecular weight solute (MW 92 D) that can be used as an osmotic agent in continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis (CAPD). Due to its low molecular weight, the osmotic gradient disappears rapidly. Despite the higher osmolality at the beginning of a dwell, ultrafiltration has been found to be lower for glycerol compared to glucose (MW 180 D) when equimolar concentrations are used. Previous studies have shown glycerol to be safe for long-term use, but some discrepancies have been reported in small solute transport and protein loss. Objective To assess permeability characteristics for a 1.4% glycerol dialysis solution compared to 1.36% glucose. Design Two standardized peritoneal permeability analyses (SPA), one using 1.4% glycerol and the other using 1.36% glucose, in random order, were performed within a span of 2 weeks in 10 stable CAPD patients. The length of the study dwell was 4 hours. Fluid kinetics and solute transport were calculated and signs of cell damage were compared for the two solutions. Setting Peritoneal dialysis unit in the Academic Medical Center, Amsterdam. Results Median values for the 1.4% glycerol SPA were as follows: net ultrafiltration 251 mL, which was higher than that for 1.36% glucose (12 mL, p < 0.01); transcapillary ultrafiltration rate 2.12 mL/min, which was higher than that for glucose (1.52 mL/min, p = 0.01); and effective lymphatic absorption rate 1.01 mL/min, which was not different from the glucose-based solution. Calculation of peritoneal reflection coefficients for glycerol and glucose showed lower values for glycerol compared to glucose (0.03 vs 0.04, calculated with both the convection and the diffusion models). A marked dip in dialysate-to-plasma ratio for sodium was seen in the 1.4% glycerol exchange, suggesting uncoupled water transport through water channels. Mass transfer area coefficients for urea, creatinine, and urate were similar for both solutions. Also, clearances of the macromolecules P2-microglobulin, albumin, IgG, and α2-macroglobulin were not different for the two osmotic agents. The median absorption was higher for glycerol, 71% compared to 49% for glucose ( p < 0.01), as could be expected from the lower molecular weight. The use of a 1.4% glycerol solution during a 4-hour dwell caused a small but significant median rise in plasma glycerol, from 0.22 mmol/L to 0.45 mmol/L ( p = 0.02). Dialysate cancer antigen 125 and lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) concentrations during the dwell were not different for both solutions. Conclusions These findings show that glycerol is an effective osmotic agent that can replace glucose in short dwells and show no acute mesothelial damage. The higher net ultrafiltration obtained with 1.4% glycerol can be explained by the higher initial net osmotic pressure gradient. This was seen especially in the first hour of the dwell. Thereafter, the osmotic gradient diminished as a result of absorption. The dip in dialysate-to-plasma ratio for sodium seen in the glycerol dwell can also be explained by this high initial osmotic pressure gradient, implying that the effect of glycerol as an osmotic agent is more dependent on intact water channels than is glucose.


RSC Advances ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 7 (78) ◽  
pp. 49684-49693 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jiyoon Bu ◽  
Young-Ho Cho ◽  
Sae-Won Han

We have applied a hypo-osmotic gradient for enhancing the isolation of viable heterogeneous circulating tumor cells.


Author(s):  
James Cannon ◽  
Daejoong Kim ◽  
Shigeo Maruyama ◽  
Junichiro Shiomi

Osmosis plays an essential role in a wide range of phenomena, and therefore it is useful to understand how to manipulate the rate at which osmosis occurs. In the present study we conduct molecular dynamics simulations to consider the influence of solute size on the osmotic pressure gradient which drives the flow. Our results show how selective choice of the size of the solute can enhance, or hinder, the establishment of a strong osmotic gradient.


1999 ◽  
Vol 40 (3) ◽  
pp. 364-370 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.T. PETERSEN ◽  
J. WISEMAN ◽  
M.R. BEDFORD

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