The Role of Dispensable Amino Acids for the Maximum Growth of Chick
- 1 February 1968
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Agricultural and Biological Chemistry
- Vol. 32 (2) , 153-160
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00021369.1968.10859038
Abstract
Chicks were fed on the purified diets of which amino acid pattern was modeled after whole egg protein and crude protein content was 21.1%, changing the dietary ratio of indispensable amino acid nitrogen to dispensable amino acid nitrogen (I/D ratio) from 1/1.5 to 3/1 at regular intervals. The balances among amino acids in each indispensable and dispensable group of test diets were kept the same pattern as that of the whole egg, respectively. Optimum I/D ratio for normal chick growth was estimated to be in the range of between 1/1 and 1.5/1, because feed efficiency was the highest at the I/D ratio 1/1 and growth rate was the highest at the I/D ratio 1.5/1. Chicks were killed and the serum was collected at the end of the experiment. It was shown that the I/D ratios of free amino acid in the serum of chicks were strongly influenced by that of diet. White Leghorn chicks fed on the Scott’s reference amino acid diet grew as well as those fed on a conventional chick starter. Nitrogen retention of the former was a little less than that of the latter, but the amount of carcass fat of the former was almost twice as much as the latter. Growth rate of chick was considerably reduced, when glutamic acid which is the only dispensable amino acid in the Scott’s diet was replaced by a mixture of glutamic acid, aspartic acid, alanine and serine, nitrogen content being kept at constant. Sufficient amount of glutamic acid in the Scott’s diet seems to be essential for the maximum growth of chick.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- Importance of an Accurate Reference Diet in the Evaluation of Proteins for Chick Growth using Plasma Amino Acid TitersJournal of Nutrition, 1966
- Use of Free Amino Acid Concentrations in Blood Plasma of Chicks to Detect Deficiencies and Excesses of Dietary Amino AcidsJournal of Nutrition, 1966
- Importance of Dispensable Amino Acids for Normal Growth of ChicksJournal of Nutrition, 1961