The effect of dietary raw and autoclaved soya-bean protein fractions on growth, pancreatic enlargement and pancreatic enzymes in rats
- 1 March 1982
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Nutrition
- Vol. 47 (2) , 281-288
- https://doi.org/10.1079/bjn19820037
Abstract
1. Raw soya-bean meal (RS) was fractionated into soya-bean lyophilized extract (SLE), soya-bean lyophilized residue (SLR), acid-precipitated proteins (APP) and whey proteins.2. Trypsin (EC 3.4.21.4) and chymotrypsin (EC 3.4.21.1) inhibitors (TI) were soluble at pH 8 and remained soluble after the extract was acidified to pH 4·4. Except for whey, heating abolished, almost totally, their inhibiting activity.3. Feeding SLE diet (high TI content) and APP diet (low TI content) resulted in growth depression below the RS level. Feeding the SLR diet resulted in an optimal growth. Feeding diets containing heated fractions improved the growth rate though not to the level observed with heated RS (HS) diet.4. RS, SLE, APP and whey diets produced similar pancreatic enlargement which could be totally (RS, whey) or partially (SLE, APP) abolished by heating.5. Feeding the RS diet reduced pancreatic amylase content. The factor responsible for this effect cofractionated with SLE and whey proteins.6. Two groups of factors in the various diets were probably responsible for the elevation in pancreatic proteases. The first group were the heat-labile factors present in RS, SLE and whey whereas the second group resisted the heat treatment and were found in APP and SLR.7. The results suggest that for optimal growth rate of rats, heat treatment should be given to the unfractionated soya-bean proteins rather than to the isolated fractions. The results further indicated that TI are not the only factors that can lead to pancreatic enlargement and changes in pancreatic enzymes composition.This publication has 24 references indexed in Scilit:
- Effects of unpalatable diets and food restriction on feed efficiency in growing rats☆Physiology & Behavior, 1980
- The Comparative Effect of Prolonged Feeding with Raw and Heated Soybean Meal on the Growth Response, Pancreatic Enlargement and Pancreatic Enzymes of ChicksAnnals of Nutrition and Metabolism, 1976
- Glucose and fatty acid metabolism in cows producing milk of low fat contentThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1974
- The metabolism of glucose, acetate, lipids and amino acids in lactating dairy cowsThe Journal of Agricultural Science, 1974
- Biological and physiological factors in soybeansJournal of Oil & Fat Industries, 1974
- The effect of methionine supplementation on the levels of pancreatopeptidase E, trypsin, chymotrypsin and amylase in the pancreas of chicks receiving raw and heated soya-bean dietsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1972
- The effect of trypsin inhibitors on pancreatopeptidase E, trypsin, chymotrypsin and amylase in the pancreas and intestinal tract of chicks receiving raw and heated soya-bean dietsBritish Journal of Nutrition, 1970
- Trypsin, chymotrypsin, and total proteolytic activity of pancreas, pancreatic juice, and intestinal contents from the bovineAnalytical Biochemistry, 1967
- Relationship between ‘antitryptic factors’ of some plant protein feeds and products of proteolysis precipitable by trichloroacetic acidJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1963
- Pancreatic Hypertrophy and Chick Growth Inhibition by Soybean Fractions Devoid of Trypsin Inhibitor.Experimental Biology and Medicine, 1963