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  • Properties of corn-expressed carbohydrase AC1 in swine diets and its effects on apparent ileal digestibility, performance, hematology, and serum chemistry.

Properties of corn-expressed carbohydrase AC1 in swine diets and its effects on apparent ileal digestibility, performance, hematology, and serum chemistry.

Heliyon (2021-08-18)
Philip A Lessard, Xuemei Li, Jonathan N Broomhead, Matthew H Parker, Christopher Bailey, R Michael Raab
ABSTRACT

Carbohydrases are often incorporated into livestock feed as digestive aids to improve animal performance. AC1 is a thermostable carbohydrase with β-1,4-glucanase, endo-cellulase, and cellobiohydrolase activity. AC1 has been expressed in corn, where it accumulates in the grain for easy inclusion in animal diets. Incorporating the enzyme in high-fiber diets (corn-soy supplemented with distiller's dry grains with solubles) that were fed to 5-week-old pigs led to a trend of decreasing viscosity of the digesta as the dose of the enzyme increased (P = 0.092). AC1 also tended to increase the apparent ileal digestibility (AID) of neutral detergent fiber (P = 0.076). When fed diets containing 2126 U/kg AC1, pigs experienced no adverse effects in terms of performance metrics (body weights, average daily gain, average daily feed intake and gain-to-feed ratio), hematology, blood chemistry or general health when compared to pigs fed a control diet that lacked AC1.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
Cellulase from Aspergillus niger, powder, off-white, ~0.8 U/mg
Sigma-Aldrich
4-Nitrophenyl β-D-cellobioside, ≥98% (TLC)
Sigma-Aldrich
β-Glucanase 2, thermostable, recombinant, expressed in E. coli, ≥90% (SDS-PAGE)
Sigma-Aldrich
4-Nitrophenyl β-D-xylopyranoside, ≥98%