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The effect of feeding adequate or deficient vitamin B6 or folic acid to breeders on methionine metabolism in 18-day-old chick embryos

Authors :
Jordan T Weil
S. Cerrate
Craig N. Coon
P. Maharjan
J. Lu
M.K. Manangi
Source :
Poultry Science, Vol 100, Iss 4, Pp 101008-(2021), Poultry Science, Poultry Science, Vol 100, Iss 7, Pp 101151-(2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

Three isotopic tracers ([2,3,3-2H3]-L-serine, [2H11]-L-betaine, and [1-13C]-L-methionine) were administered by amnion injection into 18-day-old chick embryos to investigate the kinetics of methionine metabolism. The embryos utilized were from eggs collected from 34-week-old Cobb 500 broiler breeders that were fed either a control diet containing folic acid (1.25 mg/kg diet) and pyridoxine HCl (5 mg/kg diet) or diets devoid of supplemental pyridoxine or folic acid. Intermediate metabolites of methionine metabolism and polyamines were analyzed in 18-day-old chick embryos. There were no differences in hepatic [2H2] methionine or [2H3] cysteine enrichments or in physiological concentrations of sulfur amino acids for chick embryos from breeders fed the control diet and embryos from breeders fed diets containing no pyridoxine or folic acid. Supplementation of B6 or folic acid did not affect the production of methionine and cysteine in chick embryos. However, breeders fed the control diet with both folic acid and pyridoxine supplementation produced embryos with a two-fold reduction of hepatic homocysteine and increased spermine compared with embryos from breeders fed diets containing no supplemental pyridoxine or folic acid (P

Details

ISSN :
00325791
Volume :
100
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Poultry Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f3f7fff2bb8080aa06011f1886e800a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2021.101151