Effects of Trichostrongylus colubriformis (Nematoda) on the nutrition and metabolism of sheep. II.* Metabolism of urea

1974 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 363 ◽  
Author(s):  
FB Roseby ◽  
RA Leng

The effect of infection with Trichostrongylus colubriformis on the rates of production, excrehon and recycling of urea was studied in 24 Merino lambs. The production rate of urea was estimated as the irreversible loss rate of [14C]urea given as a single injection. The feed intake of all sheep was maintained at 540 g/day throughout the experiment. Parasitized sheep had a higher plasma urea concentration than their paired controls 15–35 days after they were infected. This was associated with an increase in the rate of irreversible loss and the rate of urinary excretion of urea. The additional urea lost in urine is apparently produced from ammonia released from amino acids in the tissues or in the digestive tract. ______________________ *Part I, Aust. J. Agric. Res., 24: 947 (1973).

1996 ◽  
Vol 126 (1) ◽  
pp. 99-105 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Sutoh ◽  
Y. Obara ◽  
S. Miyamoto

SUMMARYThe effects of dietary sucrose on the metabolic rate of plasma glucose and ruminal propionate as well as the change in nitrogen kinetics were examined in four mature wethers fitted with rumen fistulas in Tsukuba, Japan in 1990. Wethers were fed at 12 equal intervals daily on crushed lucerne hay cubes (1233 g DM/day), with or without 204 g/day of sucrose. Plasma urea and glucose kinetics were determined following a single intravenous injection of [I5N]urea and [U-13C]glucose respectively; and the kinetics of ruminal ammonia and propionate were determined following a single intraruminal injection of [15N]ammonium chloride and [2–13c]sodium propionate respectively. Following supplementation of sucrose to the diet, nitrogen retention was increased (P< 0·05) with a decrease in plasma urea concentration (P< 0·05) and urinary urea excretion (P< 0·05). Sucrose supplementation decreased (P< 005) the concentration and irreversible loss rate of ruminal ammonia. Urinary allantoin excretion did not change with sucrose treatment, but the flow rate of non-ammonia-nitrogen from the rumen was increasedP< 0·05). The transfer rate of ruminal ammonia to plasma urea was also decreased (P< 0·01), whilst the transfer rate of plasma urea to ruminal ammonia was increased (P< 0·05) by dietary sucrose. Sucrose supplementation resulted in a higher concentration of propionate and butyrate (P< 0·05) in the rumen with no significant change in acetate or pH. The concentration of plasma glucose did not change with sucrose treatment, but the concentration of insulin, pool size (P< 0·05) and the irreversible loss rate of glucose (P< 0·01) were increased, reflecting the increase in the production rate of ruminal propionate (P< 0·05). It was concluded that the supplementation of sucrose affected the metabolism of urea and glucose in plasma via a change in ruminal production rate of ammonia and propionate, respectively.


1993 ◽  
Vol 121 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-130 ◽  
Author(s):  
Y. Obara ◽  
D. W. Dellow

SUMMARYThe effect of rumen fermentation on the relationship between urea and glucose kinetics was examined in sheep fed chopped lucerne hay with intraruminal infusions of water, urea, sucrose, or urea plus sucrose at Palmerston North, New Zealand in 1986. Sheep were fed hourly and infused intraruminally with water (1200 m1/day), or a similar volume containing either urea alone (13·7g/day), sucrose alone (178·2 g/day) or urea (14·6 g/day) plus sucrose (175·0 g/day). The added sucrose resulted in a lower rumen ammonia concentration (P< 0·05), lower plasma urea concentration (P< 0·05) and reduced urinary urea excretion (P< 0·05). Urea recycled to the gut tended to increase with the sucrose, urea or sucrose plus urea treatments compared with the water treatment. The fermentation of sucrose in the rumen resulted in decreases in ruminal pH (P< 0·05) and in the ratio of acetate to propionate (A:P) (P< 0·05). The infusion of sucrose also increased the concentration of propionate in rumen fluid (P< 0·05), tended to increase the plasma glucose level and increased plasma glucose irreversible loss (P< 0·05). The infusion of urea resulted in an increase in the plasma urea level (P< 0·05), urea pool size (P< 0·05) and urea irreversible loss (P< 0·01). However, urea infusion did not affect glucose metabolism or volatile fatty acid (VFA) fermentation. The effects of sucrose infusion on glucose and urea kinetics were broadly similar when given alone or with urea, apart from changes in the urea degradation rate. It was concluded that the additional fermentative activity resulting from sucrose increased propionate production which, in turn, was available for glucose production, thus ‘sparing’ amino acids for tissue protein utilization and reducing urea excretion.


1991 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 1111-1124 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Brun-Bellut ◽  
J. M. Kelly ◽  
G. W. Mathison ◽  
R. J. Christopherson

Nitrogen flow and exchanges in the digestive tract were measured in three goats during a dry stage and a subsequent hormonally induced lactation stage. Two diets, formulated with and without urea to contain either a high or low level of crude protein and rumen-degradable protein (RDP), were tested in a crossover experimental design within each stage. The amount of urea nitrogen (N) recycled to the ruminoreticulum was higher (P < 0.05) during lactation (3.5 g d−1) than in the dry stage (0.9 g d−1), as was plasma urea concentration. However, the mean amount of urea recycled was lower (P < 0.05) when the high-RDP diet was fed (1.4 g N d−1) than when the low-RDP diet was fed (3.0 g N d−1), even though the plasma urea concentration tended to be higher in goats fed the high-RDP diet. Of the estimated ruminally available N, 90–110% was incorporated into microbial cells. The proportion of bacterial N derived from rumen ammonia (0.77–0.89) was not influenced by protein source or lactation. Of the amino acids flowing into the duodenum, 69–75% were apparently absorbed in the small intestine, whereas total digestive tract apparent digestibility ranged from 81 to 83%. No more than 60% of the fecal N was derived from undigested bacteria from the rumen. It was concluded that the amount of urea which is recycled to the rumen is under metabolic control and that there is efficient use of ruminally available N by rumen microorganisms. Key words: Goats, lactation, rumen-degradable protein, 15N, urea recycling, amino acids


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. van der Meulen ◽  
◽  
P. van Wikselaar ◽  
A.J.M. Jansman ◽  
◽  
...  

1970 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 323 ◽  
Author(s):  
RF Thornton

Cattle and sheep were offered the same diet in amounts according to the ratio of their metabolic body size, and were intravenously infused with urea in amounts according to the same ratio. An apparent limit to the transfer of urea from the blood to the rumen occurred at lower plasma urea and rumen ammonia concentrations in cattle than in sheep. Associated with ingestion of feed there was a decline in the concentrations of both rumen ammonia and plasma urea, and in urinary urea excretion. It is suggested that (a) the transfer of urea from the blood to the rumen and the urinary excretion of urea are reciprocally related, and (b) the transfer of urea from the blood to the rumen and the consequent reduction in plasma urea concentration associated with feed ingestion may account for the decline in urinary urea excretion after ingestion of feed, rather than changes in the urine flow rate and in renal tubular mechanisms.


1980 ◽  
Vol 94 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. R. Egan ◽  
M. J. Ulyatt

SummaryThe utilization by sheep of dietary N provided in high protein, high water content fresh herbages (Ruanui perennial ryegrass, Tama Westerwolds ryegrass, Pitau white clover, and Fakir giant sainfoin at two stages of maturity) was studied at two levels of intake (maintenance and 1·5 maintenance). Feed was provided by constant feeder.Apparent digestibility of N was similar for all herbages (ca. 85%) except sainfoin which, particularly at a late stage of maturity, was lower (70–80%). A small loss of nitrogen across the stomachs occurred with clover (1–3 g/day) and Tama ryegrass at the higher feeding level (2 g/day), but no loss was observed with the other diets. The apparent digestibility of N and of non-ammonia N (NAN) in the intestines was lower for sainfoin, and estimated true digestibility was also lower. Amino acid N contributed less to the NAN reaching the duodenum on the sainfoin diets than on the grass and clover diets.N retention was negative at the lower level of feeding for ryegrass and clover diets. It was greatest for the sainfoin diets at similar N intakes, so that efficiency of retention of apparently digested N was also greatest for sainfoin.The size of the urea pool, the plasma urea concentration and the urea irreversible loss, using [14C]urea, did not differ significantly between diets at similar N intake. Urea irreversible loss exceeded urinary urea excretion by 35—50% on all but the late-maturity sainfoin diet, where urea irreversible loss was more than double the urinary urea output. These data indicate dietary differences in the extent of degradation of urea on recycling to the gastro-intestinal tract. Urea clearance across the kidney was also lowest for sainfoin.Data are compared in a simple model which illustrates the importance of variable clearance of urea across the kidney and the gut wall and the need for knowledge of factors which control this.


1977 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 489-496 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. F. Fuller ◽  
T. E. C. Weekes ◽  
A. Cadenhead ◽  
J. B. Bruce

1. In five experiments with growing female pigs of 38–63 kg, insulin (2 mU/kg per min) and glucose (9–17 mg/kg per min) were infused continuously for 3–7 d. In three further experiments, glucose (9 mg/kg per min) was infused alone for 5 d.2. In response to the combined infusion, plasma insulin increased 2-7-fold, plasma glucose decreased, on average, by 50% and plasma urea concentration was reduced by 40%. Urinary excretion of urea and nitrogen decreased after the first day of infusion to values averaging 70% of control levels.3. The infusion of glucose alone provoked only a small increase in plasma insulin. The reduction of urinary urea and of N excretion were approximately 25% of those observed with the combined infusions.


2021 ◽  
Vol 248 ◽  
pp. 104483
Author(s):  
Taiana Cortez de Souza ◽  
Tatiana Cortez de Souza ◽  
Gregorí Alberto Rovadoscki ◽  
Luiz Lehmann Coutinho ◽  
Gerson Barreto Mourão ◽  
...  

1997 ◽  
Vol 128 (2) ◽  
pp. 233-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. A. NEUTZE ◽  
J. M. GOODEN ◽  
V. H. ODDY

This study used an experimental model, described in a companion paper, to examine the effects of feed intake on protein turnover in the small intestine of lambs. Ten male castrate lambs (∼ 10 months old) were offered, via continuous feeders, either 400 (n = 5) or 1200 (n = 5) g/day lucerne chaff, and mean experimental liveweights were 28 and 33 kg respectively. All lambs were prepared with catheters in the cranial mesenteric vein (CMV), femoral artery (FA), jugular vein and abomasum, and a blood flow probe around the CMV. Cr-EDTA (0·139 mg Cr/ml, ∼ 0·2 ml/min) was infused abomasally for 24 h and L-[2,6-3H]phenylalanine (Phe) (420±9·35 μCi into the abomasum) and L-[U-14C]phenylalanine (49·6±3·59 μCi into the jugular vein) were also infused during the last 8 h. Blood from the CMV and FA was sampled during the isotope infusions. At the end of infusions, lambs were killed and tissue (n = 4) and digesta (n = 2) samples removed from the small intestine (SI) of each animal. Transfers of labelled and unlabelled Phe were measured between SI tissue, its lumen and blood, enabling both fractional and absolute rates of protein synthesis and gain to be estimated.Total SI mass increased significantly with feed intake (P < 0·05), although not on a liveweight basis. Fractional rates of protein gain in the SI tended to increase (P = 0·12) with feed intake; these rates were −16·2 (±13·7) and 23·3 (±15·2) % per day in lambs offered 400 and 1200 g/day respectively. Mean protein synthesis and fractional synthesis rates (FSR), calculated from the mean retention of 14C and 3H in SI tissue, were both positively affected by feed intake (0·01 < P < 0·05). The choice of free Phe pool for estimating precursor specific radioactivity (SRA) for protein synthesis had a major effect on FSR. Assuming that tissue free Phe SRA represented precursor SRA, mean FSR were 81 (±15) and 145 (±24) % per day in lambs offered 400 and 1200 g/day respectively. Corresponding estimates for free Phe SRA in the FA and CMV were 28 (±2·9) and 42 (±3·5) % per day on 400 g/day, and 61 (±2·9) and 94 (±6·0) on 1200 g/day. The correct value for protein synthesis was therefore in doubt, although indirect evidence suggested that blood SRA (either FA or CMV) may be closest to true precursor SRA. This evidence included (i) comparison with flooding dose estimates of FSR, (ii) comparison of 3H[ratio ]14C Phe SRA in free Phe pools with this ratio in SI protein, and (iii) the proportion of SI energy use associated with protein synthesis.Using the experimental model, the proportion of small intestinal protein synthesis exported was estimated as 0·13–0·27 (depending on the choice of precursor) and was unaffected by feed intake. The contribution of the small intestine to whole body protein synthesis tended to be higher in lambs offered 1200 g/day (0·21) than in those offered 400 g/day (0·13). The data obtained in this study suggested a role for the small intestine in modulating amino acid supply with changes in feed intake. At high intake (1200 g/day), the small intestine increases in mass and CMV uptake of amino acids is less than absorption from the lumen, while at low intake (400 g/day), this organ loses mass and CMV uptake of amino acids exceeds that absorbed. The implications of these findings are discussed.


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