| Literature DB >> 32365689 |
Sonia Tassone1, Riccardo Fortina1, Pier Giorgio Peiretti2.
Abstract
This review summarises the use of the Ankom DaisyII incubator (ADII; Ankom Technology Corporation Fairport, NY, USA), as presented in studies on digestibility, and its extension to other species apart from ruminants, from its introduction until today. This technique has been modified and adapted to allow for different types of investigations to be conducted. Researchers have studied and tested different procedures, and the main sources of variation have been found to be: the inoculum source, sample size, sample preparation, and bag type. In vitro digestibility methods, applied to the ADII incubator, have been reviewed, the precision and accuracy of the method using the ADII incubator have been dealt with, and comparisons with other methods have been made. Moreover, some hypotheses on the possible evolutions of this technology in non-ruminants, including pets, have been described. To date, there are no standardised protocols for the collection, storage, and transportation of rumen fluid or faeces. There is also still a need to standardise the procedures for washing the bags after digestion. Moreover, some performance metrics of the instrument (such as the reliability of the rotation mechanism of the jars) still require improvement.Entities:
Keywords: Ankom DaisyII incubator; enzyme; faeces; in vitro digestibility; inoculum; rumen fluid
Year: 2020 PMID: 32365689 PMCID: PMC7278437 DOI: 10.3390/ani10050775
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Animals (Basel) ISSN: 2076-2615 Impact factor: 2.752
Figure 1The DaisyII incubator (Ankom Technology Corporation Fairport, New York, NY, USA).
Rumen fluid (RF) and fresh faeces (FF) inocula applied to the Ankom DaisyII incubator (ADII).
| Inoculum | Species | Sample Type | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RF | Dairy cattle | 10 feeds | Variability of the dry matter digestibility for different donor cow diets as sources of inoculum | [ |
| RF | Dairy cattle | By-products | ADII vs. gas production, RF from slaughtered or cannulated cows | [ |
| RF | Steers and Dairy cattle | Grains, total mixed ration, silages | Effect of the RF on the apparent and true dry matter digestibility DMD | [ |
| RF | Sheep and Goats | Leaves, flowers and fruits of 5 browse plant species | Comparison of the true DMD and gas production kinetics with RF from animals fed the same diet | [ |
| FF | Yaks | Forage produced at high altitude | Faeces vs. RF for a comparative digestibility trial | [ |
| FF | Sheep and Camels | Fodder species from an arid environment | RF from sheep, and faeces from camels: comparative digestibility trial | [ |
| FF-RF | Cattle | Feeds with different neutral detergent fibre (NDF) contents | NDF digestibility and undigested NDF measured with RF and 2 FF from cows fed different diets | [ |
| FF-RF | Steers | 35-day regrowth alfalfa hay | Comparative evaluation of the true dry matter digestibility; steers fed alfalfa or digit grass | [ |
| FF | Horses | 4 dietary treatments (hays or hay + oat) | Comparative evaluation of in vivo vs. in vitro DM and NDF digestibility | [ |
| FF | Donkeys | 7 common feeds for donkeys | Evaluation of the apparent and true DMD and neutral detergent fibre digestibility (NDFD) at 4 incubation times (30, 48, 60, and 72 h) | [ |
Sample size and bag type applied to the Ankom DaisyII incubator (ADII).
| Sample Size (g) | Bag Type | Sample Type | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0.25 | F57 | Forages and plant parts | Particle breakdown: 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 mm | [ |
| 0.25 | F57 and F58 | Temperate and tropical grasses and legumes | uNDF after 240; effect of Na2SO3 | [ |
| 0.25 | Polyethylene polyester polymer bags | Low- and high-quality forages and grains | Different time delays and storage time between the collection of RF and the analysis | [ |
| 0.25 | F57 and dacron bags (pore size: 0.30 and 0.50 μm) | Dried samples + 5 g glass balls | DMD of feed samples with alternatives to F57 and weighted to ensure submersion in the media | [ |
| 0.25 | Dacron bags | 5 feeds + garlic or garlic oil vs. Monensin | Sheep RF, the effect of inclusion on organic matter digestibility (OMD) | [ |
| 0.30 | F57 | Triticale | Short and long (240 h) incubation times | [ |
| 0.50 | 5 × 3 cm | Pastures, forages and by-products | Comparison of in situ DM and NDF degradation kinetics | [ |
| 0.50 | F0285 | Corn silage | Comparison of in vitro and in situ estimates of indigestible NDF at 2 fermentation end points (120 and 288 h) | [ |
| 0.25 | F57 | Triticale | Comparison of NDFD with 2 sample sizes | [ |
| 0.25 | F57 | 7 feeds | Correlation with a conventional batch culture | [ |
Different buffer solutions used in in vitro digestibility trials with the Ankom DaisyII incubator (ADII) in different animal species.
| Buffer Solution | ADII References | Animal Species |
|---|---|---|
| [ | [ | Ruminants |
| [ | Ruminants | |
| [ | Horses | |
| [ | Donkeys | |
| [ | [ | Ruminants |
| [ | [ | Ruminants |
| [ | [ | Ruminants |
Precision and accuracy of the method using the Ankom DaisyII incubator (ADII).
| Parameters | Notes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| DMD and NDFD by means of the two-stage rumen fluid–pepsin technique (TT), the ADII incubator and in situ; 0.25 and 0.50 sample size; 1 and 2 mm grinding size | The digestibility values estimated means of the by ADII incubator and in situ techniques were correlated (R2 = 0.58–0.88) with values estimated by means of conventional in vitro and in vivo techniques. In most cases, the ADII incubator and in situ techniques overestimated DMD and NDFD | [ |
| In vitro DMD vs. Minson and McLeod technique [ | Good reproducibility between and within the jars in the ADII incubator | [ |
| In situ (2 different filter bags) and TDMD (traditional bottles or the ADII incubator) | The ADII incubator underestimated the TDMD values but there was direct proportionality between the in situ and in vitro DMD values | [ |
| NDFD of 18 hays | The variability was similar to that of some chemical analysis and lower than the in situ measurements | [ |
| NDFD of 162 hays | Similar average values | [ |
| NDFD and the associated calculated net energy lactation (NEl) of 10 fibrous feeds; 5 laboratories | Improved NDFD precision and improved accuracy and reproducibility of the calculated NEl for an extended fermentation time (48 h) | [ |
| Validation of a modified TT by achieved by testing the repeatability and reproducibility of the new TT as well as the correlation with a previous version of the method | Good repeatability and reproducibility achieved when using the new version of the TT with the ADII incubator; the same accuracy was achieved as that of the conventional method | [ |
Comparison of the Ankom DaisyII incubator (ADII) with other digestibility methods.
| Methods | Results (Referred to ADII Technique) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| TT | True DMD: no differences | [ |
| VS | True DMD considering 3 incubation times: the ADII technique was less efficient but there were no significant differences | [ |
| GVS | NDFD at different times: ADII always lower than GVS; better results with F57 washed in acetone | [ |
| GVS | NDFD: very few differences | [ |
| TT, VS | Apparent and true DMD: significant differences | [ |
| TSP | Intestinal digestibility of crude protein (R510 filter bags, up to 5 g sample): results closely results | [ |
| TT | Validation of a modified TT with the ADII technique | [ |
| TT | Similar digestion values; the source of inoculum may affect DMD | [ |
| TT | Apparent and true DMD, apparent and true OMD, NDFD. The TT gives more precise results but requires more labour | [ |
| TT | Good agreement, but the ADII technique gave higher values for some feeds | [ |
| TT, gas production, in vivo | The results of 3 in vitro techniques (ADII, TT and gas production) were highly correlated with in vivo; ADII technique is faster and more accurate | [ |
| Minson and McLeod [ | Higher digestibility values were obtained with ADII | [ |
| In situ | NDFD was closely correlated | [ |
| In situ | NDFD was 25–30% higher than in situ; a medium degree of correlation and low accuracy were achieved | [ |
| In situ | Incubation at different times. The digestible NDF values were closely correlated at 48 h incubation, but the ADII values of the NDFD were higher than the in situ values. | [ |
| Different in situ and in vitro techniques | Lower reproducibility coefficients for ADII than the other techniques; direct proportionality was observed between the in situ and in vitro DMD for different techniques | [ |
| Batch culture, gas production | The ADII dry matter digestibility values were higher than the gas production and batch culture values for longer incubation times than 12 h | [ |
| In vivo, in situ, TT | The ADII technique accurately predicted the in vivo DMD but overestimated in situ DMD; ADII less accurately correlated with the TT | [ |
TT = Tilley and Terry; VS = Van Soest; GVS = Goering Van Soest, TSP = three-step procedure.