Sc. Austin et al., Influence of non-starch polysaccharides structure on the metabolisable energy of UK wheat fed to poultry, J CEREAL SC, 29(1), 1999, pp. 77-88
With the inclusion of wheat in European poultry diets at 600 g/kg, or more,
there is increasing concern that its apparent metabolisable energy (AME) i
s more variable than would be predicted by conventional analysis. Twelve sa
mples of wheat with a range of AME values (8.34-13.74 MJ/kg dry matter when
fed to broiler chicks aged 11-14 d at 750 g/kg diet) were used to investig
ate the causes of this variability. AME was nor correlated with the amount
of total water-soluble non-starch polysaccharide (sNSP), soluble arabinoxyl
an (the major polysaccharide contributing to NSP) or (1 --> 3, 1 --> 4)-bet
a-glucan released from the grain or with the viscosity of aqueous extracts.
Surprisingly, in vitro viscosity was negatively related to soluble (r(2)=0
.61) and total (r(2)=0.82) arabinoxylan. This was thought to be due to the
slow, but cumulative; action of endogenous hydrolases ill the stored grain.
Soluble NSP from each wheat was characterised by measurement of molecular
weight distribution and the structural features of arabinoxylan determined
from the amount and nature of the oligosaccharides released following treat
ment with an endo-xylanase. Oligomer molecular weight was determined by mat
rix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation time of flight mass spectrometry a
nd structure by NMR. Multivariate analysis of the 32 variables measured pro
vided a three-term model able to explain approximately 0.80 of the variatio
n between wheat samples:
AME = 8.07 +/- 11.16(XRAX) + 30.67(AX-6) - 0.355(sNSP)
Two terms (XRAX, the proportion of arabinoxylan resistant to hydrolysis by
xylanase and AX-6, the properties of branched six-sugar present in hydrolys
ates) reflected the degree of branching of arabinoxylan and were positively
associated with AME while the third term, the amount of sNSP present, was
negatively related. (C) 1999 Academic Press.