1. Available phosphorus levels modulate gene expression related to intestinal calcium and phosphorus absorption and bone parameters differently in gilts and barrows
- Author
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Julia Christiane Vötterl, Jutamat Klinsoda, Simone Koger, Isabel Hennig-Pauka, Doris Verhovsek, and Barbara U. Metzler-Zebeli
- Subjects
General Veterinary ,Physiology ,Genetics ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Food Science - Abstract
Objective: Dietary phytase increases bioavailability of phytate-bound phosphorus (P) in pig nutrition affecting dietary calcium (Ca) to P ratio, intestinal uptake, and systemic utilization of both minerals, which may contribute to improper bone mineralization. We used phytase to assess long-term effects of two dietary available P (aP) levels using a one-phase feeding system on gene expression related to Ca and P homeostasis along the intestinal tract and in the kidney, short-chain fatty acids in stomach, cecum, and colon, serum, and bone parameters in growing gilts and barrows.Methods: Growing pigs (37.9±6.2 kg) had either free access to a diet without (Con; 75 gilts and 69 barrows) or with phytase (650 phytase units; n = 72/diet) for 56 days. Samples of blood, duodenal, jejunal, ileal, cecal, and colonic mucosa and digesta, kidney, and metacarpal bones were collected from 24 pigs (6 gilts and 6 barrows per diet).Results: Phytase decreased daily feed intake and average daily gain, whereas aP intake increased with phytase versus Con diet (pTRPV5, CDH1, CLDN4, ZO1, and OCLN and renal expression of TRPV5 and SLC34A3 compared to barrows (pTRPV5, TRPV6, CALB1, PMCA1b, CDH1, CLDN4, ZO1, and OCLN compared to Con diet (pSCL34A2 in cecum and of FGF23 and CLDN4 in colon compared to Con diet (p
- Published
- 2022