Challenges with nonfiber carbohydrate methods1,2
- 1 December 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Journal of Animal Science
- Vol. 81 (12) , 3226-3232
- https://doi.org/10.2527/2003.81123226x
Abstract
Nonfiber carbohydrates (NFC) encompass a compositionally and nutritionally diverse group exclusive of those carbohydrates found in NDF. Their content in feeds has often been described as a single value estimated by difference as 100% of dry matter minus the percentages of CP, NDF (adjusted for CP in NDF), ether extract, and ash. A calculated value was used because of difficulties with assays for individual NFC, but it does not differentiate among nutritionally distinct NFC. Errors in NFC estimation can arise from not accounting for CP in NDF and when multipliers other than 6.25 are appropriate to estimate CP. Analyses that begin to distinguish among NFC are those for starch, soluble fiber (non-NDF, nonstarch polysaccharides), and low molecular weight carbohydrates (mono- and oligosaccharides). Many starch analyses quantify α-glucans through specific hydrolysis of α-(1 → 4) and α-(1 → 6) linkages in the glucan, and measurement of released glucose. Incomplete gelatinization and hydrolysis will lead to underestimation of starch content. Starch values are inflated by enzyme preparations that hydrolyze carbohydrates other than α-glucan, measurement of all released monosaccharides without specificity for glucose, and failure to exclude free glucose present in the unhydrolyzed sample. Soluble fiber analyses err in a fashion similar to NFC if estimation of CP requires multipliers other than 6.25, or if contaminants such as CP and starch have not been properly accounted. Depolymerization and incomplete precipitation can also decrease soluble fiber estimates. The low molecular weight carbohydrates have been defined as carbohydrates soluble in 78 to 80% ethanol, which separates them from polysaccharides. They can be measured in extracts using broad-spectrum colorimetric assays (phenol-sulfuric acid assay or reducing sugar analysis of acid hydrolyzed samples) or chromatographic methods. Limitations of the colorimetric assays include lack of differentiation among mono- and oligosaccharides and differences in efficacy of measuring total carbohydrate. More sensitive and precise chromatographic methods require expensive equipment and specialized expertise. Current methods for NFC can separate nutritionally relevant fractions, but questions remain as to which fractions merit analysis and what analyses to use. These issues must be resolved in order to soundly evaluate and explore the roles of carbohydrates in diets.Keywords
This publication has 22 references indexed in Scilit:
- Ethanolic precipitation: A source of error in dietary fibre determinationFood Chemistry, 1993
- Dietary fiber pectic substances: Source of discrepancy between methods of fiber analysisJournal of Food Composition and Analysis, 1991
- Studies on dietary fiber. 3. Improved procedures for analysis of dietary fiberJournal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 1986
- An improved enzymic method for the determination of native and modified starchJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1985
- Determination of the non-starch polysaccharides in plant foods by gas-liquid chromatography of constituent sugars as alditol acetatesThe Analyst, 1982
- An automated procedure for the determination of soluble carbohydrates in herbageJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1977
- Carbohydrates in Grasses. I. Sugar and Fructosan Composition of the Stem Bases of Several Northern‐Adapted Grasses at Seed Maturity1Crop Science, 1966
- Instability of pectin in neutral solutionsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1959
- A detailed summative analysis of the crude fibre and nitrogen‐free extractives fractions of roughages. I.—Proposed scheme of analysisJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1958
- Analytical studies on the carbohydrates of grasses and clovers. IV.—further developments in the methods of estimation of mono‐, di‐ and oligo‐saccharides and fructosanJournal of the Science of Food and Agriculture, 1954