Literature DB >> 34071510

In Vitro Neutral Detergent Cellulase Method and Chemical Composition to Predict In Vivo Fermentable Organic Matter of Roughages.

Yue Liu1, Rui Li1, Hao Wu1, Qingxiang Meng1, Muhammad Zahoor Khan1, Zhenming Zhou1.   

Abstract

In Vivo fermentable organic matter (FOM) reflects the energy production and the potential of rumen's microbial protein synthesis. However, the in vivo method with fistulated animals for FOM measurement compromises animal welfare and is laborious as well as expensive. Although the alternative in situ nylon bag technique has been widely used, it is also costly and requires rumen liquor. Therefore, the present study was performed to compare the in situ nylon bag technique with the in vitro neutral detergent cellulase (NDC) method or chemical composition to estimate in vivo FOM of roughages. For this purpose, we selected 12 roughages, including six each from forages and crop residues. Our results have shown the strong correlation equations between FOMin situ and FOMNDC of forages (n = 6; R2 = 0.79), crop residues (n = 6; R2 = 0.80), and roughages (n = 12; R2 = 0.84), respectively. Moreover, there were also strong correlations between the chemical composition of roughages and FOMin situ (n = 12; R2 = 0.84-0.93) or FOMNDC (n = 12; R2 = 0.79-0.89). In conclusion, the in vitro NDC method and chemical composition were alternatives to in situ nylon bag technique for predicting in vivo FOM of roughages in the current experiment.

Entities:  

Keywords:  fermentable organic matter; in situ nylon bag technique; in vitro neutral detergent cellulase plus amylase method

Year:  2021        PMID: 34071510      PMCID: PMC8228038          DOI: 10.3390/ani11061594

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Animals (Basel)        ISSN: 2076-2615            Impact factor:   2.752


1. Introduction

In Vivo fermentable organic matter (FOM) of roughages reflects the rumen’s energy production and the potential of microbial protein synthesis [1]. The determination of in vivo FOM of forages with fistulated animals is costly, time-consuming, and negatively affects animal welfare [2]. On the other hand, in the French small intestine digestible protein system, FOM is calculated from organic matter total tract digestibility (OMD) [3,4]. Previous studies have shown that the methods of in situ nylon bag, gas production, pepsin–cellulase (PC), Tilley and Terry, and neutral detergent cellulase (NDC) are well correlated with in vivo OMD [5,6,7,8,9]. Although the in situ nylon bag technique has been widely used, this method requires fistulated animals and is also expensive [5]. Other existing in vitro methods, such as Tilley and Terry [5] and gas production [7], also need rumen liquor. Compared to rumen liquor-based methods, enzymatic methods eliminate the need for fistulated animals, are simpler, cheaper, faster, have greater repeatability, and ensure the standardization of the process [1,9]. Moreover, the PC method requires regular evaluation to ensure accurate results, while the NDC method has not been updated [6] and is faster than the pretreatment of samples with pepsin [10]. Therefore, it seems that NDC method may be an attractive alternative for predicting in vivo FOM. Moreover, it was shown that in vitro digestibility determined by rumen fluid or enzymes was superior to chemical characteristics [5,11]; however, the chemical composition method is considered the simpler, faster, and cheaper method [12]. Thus, the chemical composition method has also attempted to predict in vivo FOM in the current study. Kitessa et al. [3] reported that the in situ nylon bag technique could be disregarded as a standard method to test the accuracy of other techniques in cases where in vivo testing is not feasible. Additionally, the in situ nylon bag technique with the Bang-Bang (BB) apparatus was inexpensive, portable, and easy to operate to measure the rumen degradation characteristics of feedstuffs than traditional steel chain or flexible plastic tubes for binding the bags used in the in situ nylon bag technique [13]. Therefore, in the current study, we considered the in situ nylon bag technique with the BB apparatus as the reference method. To our knowledge, no study has performed an in vitro NDC method to predict in vivo FOM, and the correlation of chemical composition to predict in vivo FOM is also controversial and unclear. This study aimed to determine the possibility of predicting in vivo FOM of roughages using the in vitro NDC method or chemical composition. Thus, we hypothesized that the in vitro NDC method and chemical composition are suitable methods for an alternative in vivo FOM of roughages.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Sample Collection

Twelve roughage samples, including six each from forages and crop residues, were collected from five main beef cattle breeding areas in China. Specifically, the samples were langsdorff small reed (Hulunbuir City, Inner Mongolia), alfalfa, avena nuda straw, corn straw (Zuoyun County, Shanxi Province), mixed forage, oat straw, hulless barley straw, rapeseed straw (Hezuo City, Gansu Province), lolium perenne (Xiahe County, Gansu Province), poa annua (Nagqu Prefecture, Tibet Autonomous Region), alpine kobresia (Maizhokunggar County, Tibet Autonomous Region), and barley straw (Haiyan County, Qinghai Province). Mixed forage was collected from the natural meadow. Three samples were selected from each forage and crop residue for further analysis.

2.2. Chemical Analysis

The samples were oven-dried at 55 °C for 48 h and ground to a 2-mm mesh-screen size using a feed mill (DF-20, Wenling Linda Machinery Co. Ltd., Wenling, Zhejiang, China). Dry matter (DM; method 930.15) and ash (method 942.05) were analyzed by AOAC methods (2000) [14]. Nitrogen was determined using a protein analyzer (Rapid N III, Elementar Inc., Germany), and CP was calculated as the percentage of nitrogen × 6.25. Further, crude fiber (CF), neutral detergent fiber (NDF), and acid detergent fiber (ADF) were determined using a fiber analyzer (ANKOM A220, ANKOM Technology Corp., Macedon, NY, USA). Ether extract (EE) was extracted using an automatic extractor (ANKOM XT101, ANKOM Technology Corp., Macedon, NY, USA). Nitrogen-free extract (NFE) was calculated using the formula: w(NFE) = w(DM) − w(CP) – w(EE) – w(CF) – w(Ash). The chemical compositions and digestibility of each sample were calculated in triplicate.

2.3. In Situ Nylon Bag Technique

Three Angus steers fitted with a permanent rumen cannula (450 ± 15 kg) were utilized to determine the effective rumen degradability of the organic matter of roughages with the nylon bag technique within the BB apparatus [13]. Animals were fed a total mixed ration at 8:00 h and 16:00 h according to NRC 2000 to meet the ME requirement for 1.3 × maintenance [15], and ad libitum access to water and a mineral block was provided. This animal experiment was approved by the China Agricultural University Animal Care and Use Committee (AW28059102-1, Beijing, China). The sample was weighed (4.00 ± 0.01 g) in nylon bags (80 × 140 mm) with a pore size of 37 µm, and then suspended in the rumen before morning feeding. Bags were removed after 6, 24, 48, 72, 96, 120, and 144 h of incubation. After removal, the bags were immediately immersed in cold water to stop fermentation, washed six times (1 min/rinse) in a washing machine until the water was clean, then dried at 65 °C for 48 h. Rumen degradation kinetics was determined using the following equations. Rumen dynamic degradation rate: y = a + b (1 − Effective degradability: ED = a + (b × c) / (c + k) Here, y is the rumen degradation rate at time t, a, b, c, t, and k stand for the rapidly degraded fraction (%), the slowly degraded fraction (%), the degradation rate constant at which b is degraded (%/h), incubation time, and rumen passage rate at 0.0253%/h, respectively. The effective degradability (ED) of organic matter was regarded as the rumen fermentable organic matter (FOM) [16].

2.4. In Vitro Neutral Detergent-Cellulase Plus Amylase Method

The in vitro organic matter digestibility was determined by NDC plus amylase method using small nylon bags (37 µm, 25 × 60 mm). Samples (0.50 ± 0.001 g) were transferred to small nylon bags, sealed (FR-300B, Blueberry, Shanghai, China), boiled in neutral detergent solution with heat-stable α-amylase for 75 min (ANKOM A220, ANKOM Technology Corp., Macedon, NY, USA), then oven-dried at 65 °C for 48 h. For the cellulase buffer solution preparation, we incubated 20 g cellulase [17] in a 1 L acetic acid buffer (pH 4.8) for 1 h at 40 °C. Two small nylon bags were randomly placed in 100-mL culture tubes and pre-warmed overnight at 39 °C. The next morning, cellulase buffer solution (80 mL) was added into each preheated 100-mL culture tube using an automatic pump and then incubated for 24 h in a 40 ± 2 °C water at 40–60 rpm (DSHZ-300A, Jiangsu, China). Following incubation, the bags were immersed in cold water to stop fermentation, washed as in situ nylon bag technique, and oven-dried at 65 °C for 48 h.

2.5. Statistical Analysis

We analyzed the chemical composition and in situ organic matter degradation characteristics of samples using a two-tailed Student’s t-test [18]. Then we compared the FOM and FOMNDC of samples using the general linear model (GLM) procedure of SAS version 9.0 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA): yij = μ + ai + eij, where yij is jth observation value at the ith level of factor a, μ is the population mean, ai is the treatment effect at level i of factor a, and eij is the individual random residual error. The data of the prediction equations were analyzed using the linear regression procedure (REG) of SAS version 9.0 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA): y = b0 + b1x1 + b2x2 + ⋯ + bmxm, where y is the dependent variable and x1, x2, x3, ⋯ xmrepresent m independent variables. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05.

3. Results

3.1. Chemical Compositions of Roughages

The data regarding chemical analysis for contents (%) of DM, OM, EE, CP, CF, NDF, ADF, Ash, and NFE are presented in Table 1. Compared with crop residues, EE, CP and NFE of forages were higher (p < 0.01), but CF, NDF, and ADF were lower (p < 0.01).
Table 1

Chemical compositions of roughages (DM basis, expressed as %).

ItemRoughagesDMOMEECPCFNDFADFAshNFE
ForagesLangsdorff small reed93.28 94.67 0.84 5.94 38.25 74.88 42.66 5.33 42.91
Alfalfa92.40 94.10 0.65 18.40 29.03 42.60 34.43 5.90 42.17
Mixed forage92.62 91.15 2.02 14.85 22.19 45.43 25.15 8.85 44.71
Lolium perenne91.01 95.36 0.68 6.85 32.16 61.84 37.91 4.64 44.69
Poa annua L. 93.29 93.03 1.47 14.59 30.36 69.08 33.85 6.97 39.90
Alpine kobresia 92.80 95.73 1.27 12.80 34.80 73.82 36.17 4.27 39.67
Mean 92.57 94.00 1.16 a12.24 a31.13 b61.28 b35.03 b6.00 42.68 a
Crop residuesOat straw93.08 90.56 0.81 12.56 35.48 68.84 40.75 9.44 34.80
Hulless barley straw92.52 92.53 0.63 4.13 41.22 82.64 51.47 7.47 39.07
Rapeseed straw91.27 91.96 1.46 9.96 48.26 70.65 52.20 8.04 23.55
Avena nuda straw93.14 94.01 0.67 2.04 45.24 79.91 51.81 5.99 39.20
Corn straw92.42 95.20 0.36 3.05 39.67 79.86 47.75 4.80 44.55
Barley straw92.80 95.84 0.57 5.40 29.46 57.40 33.09 4.16 53.20
Mean 92.54 93.35 0.75 b6.19 b39.89 a73.22 a46.18 a6.65 39.06 b
SEM 1Forage vs. Crop residues0.340.59 0.15 1.42 1.95 3.79 2.15 0.59 0.14
p valueForage vs. Crop residues0.94 0.27 <0.01<0.01<0.01<0.01<0.010.27<0.01

1 SEM: standard error of the mean. Means within the same list with different letters (a, b) differ (p < 0.05).

3.2. In Situ Organic Matter Degradation

In Situ organic matter degradation characteristics of roughages are shown in Table 2. Compared with crop residues, a (p < 0.01), b (p < 0.01), c (p = 0.01), and FOM (p < 0.01) were higher in the forages.
Table 2

In Situ organic matter degradation characteristics of roughages.

ItemRoughagesa, %b, %c, %hFOMin situ, % 1
ForagesLangsdorff small reed20.84 54.16 0.017 30.55
Alfalfa24.48 58.03 0.045 41.13
Mix forage21.22 52.65 0.029 64.36
Lolium perenne21.33 50.90 0.022 47.33
Poa annua L. 20.06 50.77 0.020 50.9
Alpine kobresia 19.01 52.44 0.010 41.02
Mean 21.16 a 53.16 a 0.024 a 45.88 a
Crop residuesOat straw20.61 48.36 0.018 38.85
Hulless barley straw19.05 49.43 0.016 27.51
Rapeseed straw19.37 48.40 0.019 29.79
Avena nuda straw19.93 48.43 0.017 26.14
Corn straw19.25 50.90 0.012 33.72
Barley straw19.90 50.48 0.010 49.26
Mean 19.69 b49.33 b 0.015 b 34.21 b
SEM 2Forages vs. Crop residues0.48 0.70 0.003 3.37
p valueForages vs. Crop residues<0.01<0.010.01<0.01

1 FOM: fermentable organic matter determined by in situ nylon bag technique. 2 SEM: standard error of the mean. Means within the same list with different letters (a, b) differ (p < 0.05).

3.3. In Situ Organic Matter Disappearance Rate

In Situ organic matter disappearance rate (OMD) of forages (a) and crop residues (b) are demonstrated in Figure 1. In brief, our data show that at 144 h, OMD of forages from high to low were mixed forage (84.82), poa annua (82.92%), alpine kobresia (77.55%), lolium perenne (64.24%), alfalfa (57.21%), and langsdorff small reed (56.23%). Consequently, OMD of crop residues were 71.27% in barley straw, 65.88% in corn straw, 63.77% in oat straw, 57.91% in hulless barley straw, 46.72% in avena nuda straw, and 42.08% in rapeseed straw.
Figure 1

Incubated time (x) and in situ organic matter disappearance rate (y) of forages (a) and crop residues (b), respectively.

3.4. Prediction Equations of FOMin situ Based on Chemical Composition

The regression equations between FOM and chemical composition (EE, CP, CF, NDF, ADF, Ash, and NFE) of roughages (n = 12) are presented in Table 3. From equations 1 to 5 achieved higher reliability (p < 0.01), which contain CF (R2 = 0.84), ADF (R2 = 0.87), EE and CF (R2 = 0.92), EE, CP and ADF (R2 = 0.92), EE, CP, and CF (R2 = 0.93).
Table 3

Prediction equations between FOM and chemical compositions of roughages.

ItemRegression Equation 1R2p-Value RMSE 2
1FOMin situ = 88.85 − 1.40 CF0.84<0.014.76
2FOMin situ = 89.52 − 1.22 ADF0.87<0.014.25
3FOMin situ = 78.62 + 6.67 EE − 1.27 CF0.92<0.013.65
4FOMin situ = 89.79 + 5.44 EE − 0.44 CP − 1.26 ADF0.92<0.013.90
5 FOMin situ = 84.80 + 8.56 EE − 0.39 CP − 0.64 CF 0.93<0.013.48

1 FOM: fermentable organic matter determined by in situ nylon bag technique. 2 RMSE: root mean squared error.

3.5. Comparison of FOMNDC and FOMin situ

The FOMNDC and FOM were presented in Table 4. For forages and crop residues, we only obtained a difference in alfalfa (p = 0.02).
Table 4

Comparison between FOMNDC and FOM of roughages (DM basis, expressed as %).

Item 1Roughages FOMNDC 1CV 2FOMin situ 3CVSEM 4p-Value
ForagesLangsdorff small reed28.761.8330.5512.991.630.48
Alfalfa47.77 a1.6441.13 b6.561.150.02
Mixed forage71.431.7364.369.092.440.11
Lolium perenne45.704.3047.334.911.240.41
Poa annua 43.962.7050.9012.762.690.14
Alpine kobresia 41.991.6941.029.291.580.69
Crop residuesOat straw38.493.8038.8513.442.210.91
Hulless barley straw21.603.6127.5117.992.040.11
Rapeseed straw31.964.3629.795.480.880.15
Avena nuda straw23.864.2426.145.680.730.09
Corn straw32.445.4133.729.381.480.57
Barley straw46.833.2349.267.341.600.34

1 FOMNDC: fermentable organic matter determined by in vitro neutral detergent–cellulase plus amylase method. 2 CV: coefficient of variation. 3 FOM: fermentable organic matter determined by in situ nylon bag technique. 4 SEM: root mean squared error. Means within the same row with different letters (a, b) differ (p < 0.05).

3.6. Correlation Analysis between FOMNDC and FOMin situ of Forages, Crop Residues, and Roughages

The correlation analysis between FOMNDC and FOM of forages (a), crop residues (b), and roughages (c) is presented in Figure 2. Our results show the strong correlation equations between FOM and FOMNDC of forages (n = 6; R2 = 0.79), crop residues (n = 6; R2 = 0.80), and roughages (n = 12; R2 = 0.84), respectively.
Figure 2

Linear equations of fermentable organic matter between determined by the in vitro neutral detergent–cellulase plus amylase method (x) and the in situ nylon bag technique (y) among forages (a), crop residues (b) and roughages (c), respectively.

3.7. Prediction Equations of FOMNDC Based on Chemical Composition

The regression equations generated between FOMNDC and chemical composition (EE, CP, CF, NDF, ADF, Ash, and NFE) of roughages are presented in Table 5. Based on our findings, it was shown that the R2 increased in equations 1 through 8 (p < 0.01), which contains a chemical composition of CF (R2 = 0.79), EE and NDF (R2 = 0.83), ADF (R2 = 0.84), EE, CP and NDF (R2 = 0.84), EE and ADF (R2 = 0.84), EE, CP and ADF (R2 = 0.88), EE, CP, CF (R2 = 89), EE and CF (R2 = 0.89), respectively.
Table 5

Prediction equations between FOMNDC and chemical compositions of roughages.

ItemRegression Equation 1R2p-ValueRMSE 2
1FOMNDC = 96.31 − 1.60 CF0.79<0.016.51
2FOMNDC = 81.99 + 9.32 EE − 0.76 NDF0.83< 0.016.10
3FOMNDC = 96.83 − 1.41 ADF0.84<0.015.59
4FOMNDC = 88.74 + 10.82 EE − 0.34 CP − 0.84 NDF 0.84<0.016.33
5FOMNDC = 85.47 + 5.79 EE − 1.27 ADF0.88<0.015.18
6FOMNDC = 86.20 + 5.96 EE − 0.04 CP − 1.28 ADF0.88<0.015.49
7FOMNDC = 80.73 + 9.03 EE + 0.02 CP − 1.41 CF0.89<0.015.31
8FOMNDC = 80.98 + 9.10 EE − 1.41 CF0.89<0.015.00

1 FOMNDC: rumen fermentable organic matter digestibility determined by in vitro neutral detergent–cellulase plus amylase method. 2 RMSE = root mean squared error.

4. Discussion

In Vivo FOM depends on rumen dynamic processes, while in vivo OMD depends on the digestion of OM in the total digestive tract, and a reduction in the rumen can be compensated with the enhancement of the fermentation of the hindgut. Therefore, in vivo FOM’s determination is more difficult than that of in vivo OMD; the measurement of in vivo FOM is also less precise than in vivo OMD. Consistently, the differences between alternative methods will probably be more pronounced when correlated with in vivo FOM than with in vivo OMD [1]. It was shown in a previous report that the in vitro method is the most inaccurate in predicting the digestibility of some low-quality feeds, such as hay and grain by-products [3]. The low-quality feed has higher contents of insoluble material, which up to some extent, determines the digestibility of a feed. When the roughage is treated with neutral detergent solution, the soluble carbohydrates, pectin, proteins, and other soluble components dissolve, leaving insoluble cell walls, which can be degraded by cellulase [10]. Therefore, in our study, we selected the NDC method. Consequently, to combine the characteristics of beef roughage, we used low-quality roughages as experimental material, which is in line with previous findings [19]. Although studies have suggested that the feedstuff’s chemical composition cannot be used to predict OMD satisfactorily [3,20,21]. On the contrary, a good relationship between chemical composition and FOM or FOMNDC of roughages was observed in the current study. These findings suggest that it is possible to predict in vivo FOM by the chemical compositions of a sample. Moreover, research has shown that chemical composition is related to DMI, DMI is negatively related to NDF, and NDF associated with gastrointestinal filling [22], and a strong relationship between NDF and ADF is well established, which can explain that equations based on ADF and NDF are accurate enough to predict FOM or FMNDC of roughages. Additionally, the prediction of EE, CP, and CF in the same equation was more accurate than that of CF or ADF alone, suggesting that using chemical composition to predict in vivo FOM may be more correlated with fiber components. In the future, with increasing the number of samples, more accurate prediction equations are expected to be obtained. The findings of our study showed a strong correlation between FOMNDC and FOM of roughages (R2 = 0.84). Consistently, Mary et al. [10] had documented the correlation between NDC and in vivo values and seemed to be consistent with those obtained by Tilley and Terry techniques. Moreover, that relationship was increased with the number of samples. Givens et al. [23] also reported a higher R2 value between in vivo OMD and in vitro OMD in the spring forage than in the autumn forage. Future samples collected only once to construct the equation will not be adequate; the collection of more samples at different times of the year is suggested. It may be noted that enzyme-based FOM measurements did not take into account possible interactions between microbial species present in the rumen. Although the nylon bag technique feed samples are digested in the actual rumen environment, many of the procedures involved in this method have not been standardized, and the range of variability within laboratories may be greater than all other in vitro methods [3]. Therefore, different methods have their advantages and disadvantages, but as long as the correlation between methods is strong, they might be replaced by each other.

5. Conclusions

Altogether, it was concluded that there is a strong relationship between FOM values obtained with the in situ nylon bag technique and the in vitro NDC method, which FOM = 0.77 FOMNDC + 9.90 (forages, R2 = 0.79), FOM = 0.88 FOMNDC + 5.57 (crop residues, R2 = 0.80), FOM = 0.81 FOMNDC + 7.92 (roughages, R2 = 0.84). Moreover, the FOM predicted by chemical composition correlates very well with the in situ nylon bag technique (R2 = 0.84–0.93) and in vitro NDC method (R2 = 0.79–0.89), respectively. Therefore, the NDC method and chemical composition seem adequate to develop equations to predict the in vivo FOM. However, more research is warranted to develop local equations considering specific pasture types, environmental conditions such as harvest season, and phenological stages, and to corroborate such predictions with in vivo data where conditions permit.
  4 in total

1.  Effects of replacing grass silage with either maize or whole-crop wheat silages on the performance and meat quality of beef cattle offered two levels of concentrates.

Authors:  T W J Keady; F O Lively; D J Kilpatrick; B W Moss
Journal:  Animal       Date:  2007-05       Impact factor: 3.240

2.  Comparison of in vitro and in situ methods in evaluation of forage digestibility in ruminants.

Authors:  S J Krizsan; L Nyholm; J Nousiainen; K-H Südekum; P Huhtanen
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2012-05-14       Impact factor: 3.159

3.  Technical note: A special apparatus for facilitating the in situ nylon bag measurement of the ruminal degradation of feedstuffs in cattle.

Authors:  F Wang; D Y Li; Q X Meng
Journal:  J Anim Sci       Date:  2016-08       Impact factor: 3.159

4.  The development of an intraruminal nylon bag technique using non-fistulated animals to assess the rumen degradability of dietary plant materials.

Authors:  J H Pagella; R W Mayes; F J Pérez-Barbería; E R Ørskov
Journal:  Animal       Date:  2017-05-30       Impact factor: 3.240

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.