Department of Animal and Food Science, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY40546, USA.
Department of Animal Sciences, North Dakota State University, Fargo, ND58102, USA.
Animal. 2020 Mar;14(S1):s17-s28. doi: 10.1017/S1751731119003136.
Pregastric fermentation along with production practices that are dependent on high-energy diets means ruminants rely heavily on starch and protein assimilation for a substantial portion of their nutrient needs. While the majority of dietary starch may be fermented in the rumen, significant portions can flow to the small intestine. The initial phase of small intestinal digestion requires pancreatic α-amylase. Numerous nutritional factors have been shown to influence pancreatic α-amylase secretion with starch producing negative effects and casein, certain amino acids and dietary energy having positive effects. To date, manipulation of α-amylase secretion has not resulted in substantial changes in digestibility. The second phase of digestion involves the actions of the brush border enzymes sucrase-isomaltase and maltase-glucoamylase. Genetically, ruminants appear to possess these enzymes; however, the absence of measurable sucrase activity and limited adaptation with changes in diet suggests a reduced capacity for this phase of digestion. The final phase of carbohydrate assimilation is glucose transport. Ruminants possess Na+-dependent glucose transport that has been shown to be inducible. Because of the nature of pregastric fermentation, ruminants see a near constant flow of microbial protein to the small intestine. This results in a nutrient supply, which places a high priority on protein digestion and utilization. Comparatively, little research has been conducted describing protein assimilation. Enzymes and processes appear consistent with non-ruminants and are likely not limiting for efficient digestion of most feedstuffs. The mechanisms regulating the nutritional modulation of digestive function in the small intestine are complex and coordinated via the substrate, neural and hormonal effects in the small intestine, pancreas, peripheral tissues and the pituitary-hypothalamic axis. More research is needed in ruminants to help unravel the complexities by which small intestinal digestion is regulated with the aim of developing approaches to enhance and improve the efficiency of small intestinal digestion.
瘤胃发酵以及依赖高能饲料的生产实践意味着反刍动物在很大程度上依赖淀粉和蛋白质同化来满足其大部分营养需求。虽然大部分日粮淀粉可在瘤胃中发酵,但仍有相当一部分可流向小肠。小肠消化的初始阶段需要胰腺α-淀粉酶。有大量营养因素已被证明会影响胰腺α-淀粉酶的分泌,其中淀粉产生负面影响,而酪蛋白、某些氨基酸和膳食能量则产生积极影响。迄今为止,对α-淀粉酶分泌的操纵并未导致消化率的实质性变化。消化的第二阶段涉及刷状缘酶蔗糖酶-异麦芽糖酶和麦芽糖酶-葡糖苷酶的作用。从遗传学角度来看,反刍动物似乎具有这些酶;然而,由于缺乏可测量的蔗糖酶活性以及对饮食变化的适应性有限,这表明它们在这一消化阶段的能力降低。碳水化合物同化的最后阶段是葡萄糖转运。反刍动物具有已被证明可诱导的 Na+-依赖性葡萄糖转运。由于前胃发酵的性质,反刍动物的微生物蛋白几乎持续不断地流向小肠。这导致了一种营养供应,对蛋白质消化和利用的优先级很高。相比之下,描述蛋白质同化的研究很少。酶和过程似乎与非反刍动物一致,并且对于大多数饲料的有效消化不太可能是限制因素。调节小肠消化功能的营养调节机制很复杂,通过小肠、胰腺、外周组织和垂体-下丘脑轴中的底物、神经和激素效应进行协调。反刍动物需要更多的研究来帮助揭示小肠消化受到调节的复杂性,目的是开发增强和改善小肠消化效率的方法。