Evidence in support of a role for plant-mediated proteolysis in the rumens of grazing animals


Autoria(s): Merry, Roger J.; Leemans, David K.; Kingston-Smith, Alison H.; Theodorou, Michael K.; Thomas, Howard
Contribuinte(s)

Institute of Biological, Environmental and Rural Sciences

Data(s)

11/12/2008

11/12/2008

12/02/2005

Resumo

Kingston-Smith, A. H., Merry, R. J., Leemans, D. K., Thomas, Howard, Theodorou, M. K. (2005). Evidence in support of a role for plant-mediated proteolysis in the rumens of grazing animals. British Journal of Nutrition, 93(1), 73-79. Sponsorship: DEFRA / BBSRC RAE2008

The present work aimed to differentiate between proteolytic activities of plants and micro-organisms during the incubation of grass in cattle rumens. Freshly cut ryegrass was placed in bags of varying permeability and incubated for 16 h in the rumens of dairy cows that had previously grazed a ryegrass sward, supplemented with 4 kg dairy concentrate daily. Woven polyester bags (50 ?m pore size) permitted direct access of the micro-organisms and rumen fluid enzymes to the plant material. The polythene was impermeable even to small molecules such as NH3. Dialysis tubing excluded micro-organisms and rumen enzymes/metabolites larger than 10 kDa. DM loss was 46?3 % in polyester, 36?2 % in polythene and 38?1 % in dialysis treatments. It is possible that the DM loss within polythene bags occurred due to a solubilisation of plant constituents (e.g. water-soluble carbohydrates) rather than microbial attachment/degradation processes. The final protein content of the herbage residues was not significantly different between treatments. Regardless of bag permeability, over 97 % of the initial protein content was lost during incubations in situ. Electrophoretic separation showed that Rubisco was extensively degraded in herbage residues whereas the membrane-associated, light-harvesting protein remained relatively undegraded. Protease activity was detected in herbage residues and bathing liquids after all incubation in situ treatments. Although rumen fluid contains proteases (possibly of plant and microbial origin), our results suggest that, owing to cell compartmentation, their activity against the proteins of intact plant cells is limited, supporting the view that plant proteases are involved in the degradation of proteins in freshly ingested herbage.

Peer reviewed

Formato

7

Identificador

Merry , R J , Leemans , D K , Kingston-Smith , A H , Theodorou , M K & Thomas , H 2005 , ' Evidence in support of a role for plant-mediated proteolysis in the rumens of grazing animals ' British Journal of Nutrition , pp. 73-79 . DOI: 10.1079/BJN20041303

1475-2662

PURE: 91943

PURE UUID: 21e86660-44e1-4f49-8f7b-f9f23e7e8c8a

dspace: 2160/1537

http://hdl.handle.net/2160/1537

http://dx.doi.org/10.1079/BJN20041303

Idioma(s)

eng

Relação

British Journal of Nutrition

Tipo

/dk/atira/pure/researchoutput/researchoutputtypes/contributiontojournal/article

Direitos