1986
DOI: 10.1079/bjn19860063
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Digestion of milk, fish and soya-bean protein in the preruminant calf: flow of digesta, apparent digestibility at the end of the ileum and amino acid composition of ileal digesta

Abstract: 1. Digesta were collected from eleven preruminant calves fitted with re-entrant (four calves in Expt 1 and three in Expt 2) or single cannulas (four calves in Expt 1) in the terminal ileum. Collection periods lasted 24 h (Expt 1) or 96 h (Expt 2).2. Two milk-substitutes (fish and soya bean) and a control diet were given to the calves. In the control diet, protein was entirely provided by skim-milk powder. In the other two diets, protein was provided mainly by a partially hydrolysed white-fish protein concentra… Show more

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Cited by 67 publications
(73 citation statements)
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References 48 publications
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“…Feeding a high-proline-rich diet resulted in an increased expression of intestinal brush border dipeptidyl peptidase IV [32]. Soya protein contains about 40 % less proline than milk protein [8]. This could have partially contributed to the variations observed here for the activity of this enzyme.…”
Section: Histomorphometrymentioning
confidence: 57%
“…Feeding a high-proline-rich diet resulted in an increased expression of intestinal brush border dipeptidyl peptidase IV [32]. Soya protein contains about 40 % less proline than milk protein [8]. This could have partially contributed to the variations observed here for the activity of this enzyme.…”
Section: Histomorphometrymentioning
confidence: 57%
“…Furthermore, availability of edible-grade milk proteins may decline in the future as use of these proteins in human foods increases. Alternative protein ingredients, including soy (15,17,28), wheat protein (3,27), fish protein (7,8,13), and potato protein (3), have been evaluated and incorporated into some CMR.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They were then fitted with an abomasal catheter and an ileo-cecal re-entrant cannula under general anesthesia (Guilloteau et al 1986;Bush et al 1992 Brooks and Morr (1985) …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%