| Literature DB >> 26973609 |
Elizabeth A Latham1, Robin C Anderson2, William E Pinchak3, David J Nisbet2.
Abstract
Nitrate and certain short chain nitrocompounds and nitro-oxy compounds are being investigated as dietary supplements to reduce economic and environmental costs associated with ruminal methane emissions. Thermodynamically, nitrate is a preferred electron acceptor in the rumen that consumes electrons at the expense of methanogenesis during dissimilatory reduction to an intermediate, nitrite, which is primarily reduced to ammonia although small quantities of nitrous oxide may also be produced. Short chain nitrocompounds act as direct inhibitors of methanogenic bacteria although certain of these compounds may also consume electrons at the expense of methanogenesis and are effective inhibitors of important foodborne pathogens. Microbial and nutritional consequences of incorporating nitrate into ruminant diets typically results in increased acetate production. Unlike most other methane-inhibiting supplements, nitrate decreases or has no effect on propionate production. The type of nitrate salt added influences rates of nitrate reduction, rates of nitrite accumulation and efficacy of methane reduction, with sodium and potassium salts being more potent than calcium nitrate salts. Digestive consequences of adding nitrocompounds to ruminant diets are more variable and may in some cases increase propionate production. Concerns about the toxicity of nitrate's intermediate product, nitrite, to ruminants necessitate management, as animal poisoning may occur via methemoglobinemia. Certain of the naturally occurring nitrocompounds, such as 3-nitro-1-propionate or 3-nitro-1-propanol also cause poisoning but via inhibition of succinate dehydrogenase. Typical risk management procedures to avoid nitrite toxicity involve gradually adapting the animals to higher concentrations of nitrate and nitrite, which could possibly be used with the nitrocompounds as well. A number of organisms responsible for nitrate metabolism in the rumen have been characterized. To date a single rumen bacterium is identified as contributing appreciably to nitrocompound metabolism. Appropriate doses of the nitrocompounds and nitrate, singly or in combination with probiotic bacteria selected for nitrite and nitrocompound detoxification activity promise to alleviate risks of toxicity. Further studies are needed to more clearly define benefits and risk of these technologies to make them saleable for livestock producers.Entities:
Keywords: methane reduction; nitrate; nitrate toxicity; nitrocompounds; rumen
Year: 2016 PMID: 26973609 PMCID: PMC4777734 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.00228
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Standard molar Gibbs Free energy for reductive processes.
| Carbon dioxide reduction to methane | −8 | −244 | 131 |
| Fumarate to succinate | −2 | 33 | 86 |
| Oxygen to water | −2 | 818 | 228 |
| Nitrate reduction to ammonia | −8 | – | 599.6 |
| Nitrate reduction to nitrite | −2 | 433 | 163.2 |
| Nitrite reduction to ammonia | −6 | 363 | 436.4 |
| Nitrate reduction to nitrogen gas | −5 | – | 1120 |
| Nitrate reduction to nitric oxide | −3 | 350 | 147 |
| Nitric oxide reduction to nitrous oxide | −1 | 1175 | 306.1 |
| Nitrous oxide reduction to nitrogen gas | −1 | 1355 | 341.4 |
Adapted from Thauer et al. (.
Microbial nitrogen metabolism in the rumen.
| + | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dissimilatory nitrate reduction | NO3 | NO2 | NH4 | |||
| Assimilatory nitrate reduction | NO3 | NO2 | NH4 | |||
| Denitrification | NO3 | NO2 | ||||
NO.
Summary of nitrate and nitrocompound toxicity.
| Nitrate | Feeds | See nitrite | Many groups | Reduced to nitrite |
| Nitrite | Produced from nitrates in feeds | Methemoglobinemia | Many groups | Further broken down into ammonium |
| 3-Nitro-1-propanol | Inhibits succinate dehydrogenase | Metabolized to aminopropanol in the rumen and 3-nitro-1-propionate in the liver | ||
| 3-Nitro-1-propionate | Inhibits succinate dehydrogenase | Metabolized to β-alanine in the rumen which is futher metabolized | ||
| Nitroethane/nitroethanol | Synthetic | Unknown (possible respiratory toxicosis) | Metabolized to ethylamine/possibly to ethanolamine |
Effects of nitrate supplementation to ruminants on volatile fatty acid production, metHb, and methane reduction .
| Alaboudi and Jones, | KNO3 | No effect | Increased | Decreased | Decreased | Top dressed | Sheep | 2.0 | NM | 0.05 | 0.02480 |
| Asanuma et al., | KNO3 | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Top dressed | Goats | NM | −89 | NM | 0.00310 |
| de Raphélis-Soissan et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | No effect | Increased | Decreased | NM | Top dressed | Sheep | 45.0 | 19 | 2.0 | 0.00767 |
| El-Zaiat et al., | Ca(NO3)2:NH3NO3 | Increased | Increased | No effect | Increased | Encapsulated | Lambs | 1.0 | −33 | 4.5 | 0.02110 |
| Farra and Satter, | KNO3:NaNO3 | No effect | Increased | Decreased | Decreased | Top dressed | Sheep | 2.0 | NM | 6.0 | 0.00510 |
| Hulshof et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect | Top dressed | Beef | NM | −32 | 2.5 | 0.00600 |
| Lee et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect | Encapsulated | Beef | < 2.0 | 18 | 2.5 | 0.00844 |
| Leng et al., | KNO3 | NM | NM | NM | NM | Top dressed | Beef | < 1.0 | −29 | 6.0 | 0.01020 |
| Li et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | No effect | Increased | No effect | Decreased | Top dressed | Sheep | < 1.0 | −35 | 3.0 | 0.01150 |
| Lund et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect | Top dressed | Dairy | NM | −31 | 0.7 | 0.00120 |
| Newbold et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | NM | NM | NM | NM | Top dressed | Beef | >20 | −30 | 3.0 | 0.00266 |
| Nolan et al., | KNO3 | Decreased | Increased | Decreased | Decreased | Top dressed | Sheep | < 1.0 | −23 | 4.0 | 0.00680 |
| Pal et al., | KNO3 | No effect | No effect | Decreased | No effect | Top dressed | Sheep | NM | NM | 2.0 | 0.00600 |
| Sar et al., | NaNO3 | Increased | Increased | Decreased | Decreased | Via cannula | Sheep | 18.4 | −50 | n/a | 0.00580 |
| Sar et al., | NaNO3 | No effect | Increased | No effect | Decreased | Via cannula | Sheep | 2.0 | −50 | n/a | 0.00580 |
| Takahashi and Young, | NaNO3 | NM | NM | NM | NM | Via cannula | Sheep | 20.0 | −86 | n/a | 0.00188 |
| van Zijderveld et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect | Top dressed | Lambs | 7.0 | −32 | 2.6 | 0.00805 |
| van Zijderveld et al., | Ca(NO3)3 | NM | NM | NM | NM | Top dressed | Dairy | 4.7 | −16 | 1.0 | 0.00366 |
| Velazco et al., | Ca(NO3)2 | NM | NM | NM | NM | Top dressed | Beef | 3.0 | −17 | 2.6 | 0.00960 |
KNO.
mol/kg body weight.
NM, not measured; n/a, not applicable.
Animal were not previously adapted to nitrate additions.
Effects of nitrocompound supplementation on methane and volatile fatty acid production during .
| 3-Nitro-1-propionate | Anderson and Rasmussen, | 5–20 | 50:50 H2:CO2 | 19–69% | Increased | No effect | Increased | Increased |
| Nitroethane | Gutierrez-Bañuelos et al., | 4–9 | 50:50 H2:CO2 | 89–80% | No effect | No effect | No effect | Increased |
| Nitroethane | Bozic et al., | 13 | 50:50 H2:CO2 | 99% | Decreased | Increased | Decreased | Increased |
| Nitroethane | Anderson et al., | 2–24 | CO2 | 58–95% | Variable | Variable | Variable | Variable |
| Nitroethanol | Anderson et al., | 12 | CO2 | 95% | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect |
| 2-Nitro-1-propanol | Anderson et al., | 12 | CO2 | 91% | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect |
| Nitroethane | Anderson et al., | 3–12 | CO2 | 94–99% | No effect | No effect | Increased | Increased |
| Dimethyl-2-nitroglutarate | Anderson et al., | 3–12 | CO2 | 92–97% | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect |
| 2-Nitro-methyl-propionate | Anderson et al., | 3–12 | CO2 | 98% | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect |
| Nitroethane | Zhou et al., | 12 | 10:15:85 H2:CO2:N2 | None | No effect | No effect | No effect | No effect |
| Nitroethanol | Zhou et al., | 12 | 10:15:85 H2:CO2:N2 | 99% | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased | Decreased |
Concentrations have been rounded to nearest whole number.