Equine Nutrition/Proteins
Appearance
Proteins
[edit | edit source]The following information was taken from https://class.coursera.org/equinenutrition-001/wiki/view?page=Week2 Equine Nutrition by Jo-Anne Murray
Protein • Required for various functions
– Structural (e.g. muscle, skin, hair) – Enzymes (catalysts that affect the rate of reactions in the body) – Hormones (chemical messengers that regulate metabolic processes) – Immune compounds (for fighting infection) – Transport compounds (e.g. transport of nutrients)
• Consists of chains of amino acids
• Essential and non‐essential amino acids
• Non‐essential Protein: synthesized by the animal
• Essential Protein(need to be supplied in the diet)
– Lysine (first limiting: present in the least amount relative to requirement) – Methionine – Threonine – Isoleucine – Valine – Arginine – Tryptophan – Histidine – Phenylalanine
• Protein breakdown begins in the stomach
– Acidity denatures the proteins – Pepsin partially degrades proteins into smaller peptides – No protein absorption in the stomach
• Further broken down in Small Intestine
– Proteases break down proteins to amino acids – Absorbed across Small Intestine gut wall
• Protein associated with the plant cell wall – fermented in Large Intestine
• Protein digested in Small Intestine – used by the horse
• No amino acid absorption in Large Intestine
• Microbes in Large Intestine degrade protein
– Used for microbial growth – No biological value to horse