6533b821fe1ef96bd127c3f4
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Intramuscular fatty acid composition of lambs given a tanniniferous diet with or without polyethylene glycol supplementation.
Massimiliano LanzaP. PennisiD. BarbagalloAlessandro PrioloValentina VastaM. Bellasubject
chemistry.chemical_classificationChemistryLinolenic acidLinoleic acidConjugated linoleic acidLambVaccenic acidPolyethylene glycolFatty acidchemistry.chemical_compoundAnimal scienceBiochemistryPEG ratioCarob podTanninConjugated linoleic acidTanninsFood SciencePolyunsaturated fatty aciddescription
The aim of this trial was to investigate the effects that dietary tannins have on lamb intramuscular fatty acids. Twenty-seven lambs were divided into three homogeneous groups: control group, receiving commercial concentrate based on maize; tannin group, fed a diet based on carob pulp (45% as fed basis); PEG group, receiving the same diet as the latter with addition of 42g/kg of polyethylene glycol (PEG, a binding agent that eliminates the effects of condensed tannins). The duration of the trial was 45 d. Intramuscular fatty acids were measured in the longissimus dorsi muscle. The isomer cis-9 trans-11 of linoleic acid (conjugated linoleic acid or CLA) and linolenic acid were higher in the longissimus muscle fat from animals fed the control diet compared to the other groups (P0.0005); these fatty acids were higher in the fat from animals fed the carob diet supplemented with PEG compared to those fed the same diet without PEG (P0.05). trans-Vaccenic acid (C18:1 trans-11) was found at higher concentration in fat from control and PEG lambs compared to tannin lambs (P0.01); the CLA/C18:1 trans-11 ratio was lower in lambs fed control and PEG diets than in tannin-fed animals (P0.05).
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2007-01-01 |