Effects of dry matter content on trypsin inhibitors and urease activity in heat treated soya beans fed to weaned piglets $

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1 Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105±115 Effects of dry matter content on trypsin inhibitors and urease activity in heat treated soya beans fed to weaned piglets $ C.E. White *, D.R. Campbell 1, L.R. McDowell Department of Animal Sciences, Institute of Food and Agricultural Sciences, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA Received 1 April 1999; received in revised form 28 January 2000; accepted 8 June 2000 Abstract A nutrition study was conducted to evaluate the growth response of weaned piglets fed diets containing soya beans that had been processed into protein supplements at two different levels of dry matter (DM) and temperature. Four diets contained protein supplements prepared from whole full-fat soya beans equilibrated at 800 or 900 g kg 1 DM prior to being heated to 110 or 1258C. An additional diet contained a protein supplement prepared from raw whole full-fat soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM; i.e. an unheated soya bean protein supplement. The experimental control diet was supplemented with a solvent extracted commercially processed soya bean meal (900 g kg 1 DM) containing 480 g crude protein kg 1. Soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM prior to heat treatment at 1108C produced protein supplements, after heat treatment, that had higher residual levels of trypsin inhibitors and urease activity than measured in soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM prior to the same heat treatment. The moisture content of soya beans prior to heat treatment affected the level of heat necessary to lower values for trypsin inhibitors and urease activity. Soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM prior to heating at 1108C, produced a protein supplement with similar residual concentrations of trypsin inhibitors and urease activity to soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM prior to heating at 1258C. This observation suggested that the soya beans with higher moisture content required lower heat energy to inactivate trypsin inhibitors and urease. The pen unit response of piglets fed the diet containing the soya bean protein supplement prepared from soybeans processed at 900 g kg 1 DM and heated to 1108C was not improved when compared to piglets fed the diet containing the unheated soya bean protein supplement. Soya beans at 800 or 900 g kg 1 DM prior to heating to 1108C, or soybeans at 900 g kg 1 DM heated to 1258C, produced protein supplements that were inadequately heat processed as indicated by the values for residual trypsin inhibitors and urease activity, and, the depressed pen unit response of piglets when compared to those fed the control diet. $ Florida Agricultural Experiment Station Journal Series no. R * Corresponding author. Fax: address: white@animal.u.edu (C.E. White). 1 Present address: Roche Vitamins and Fine Chemicals, Paramus, NJ 07652, USA /00/$ ± see front matter # 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PII: S (00)

2 106 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105±115 In contrast, piglets fed the protein supplement prepared from soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM prior to heating to 1258C, displayed an average daily feed intake and feed-to-gain ratio that did not differ signi cantly from piglets fed the control diet. These data indicate that when whole full-fat soya beans were processed by the dry roasting method, their initial DM content of 800 or 900 g kg 1 affected the processing temperature necessary to denature or otherwise inactivate inherent trypsin inhibitors and urease activity. # 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. Keywords: Piglets; Soya bean; Trypsin inhibitors; Urease activity 1. Introduction The soya bean (Glycine max (L.) Merrill) is classi ed as an oilseed legume and inadequately heat processed soya beans contain an array of inherent anti-nutritional factors as reviewed by Liener (1988). Among these are the protease trypsin inhibitors and urease. When soya beans are subjected to adequate heat processing by any of a number of commercial or experimental laboratory methods, the trypsin inhibitors and other antinutritional factors are suf ciently inactivated, and their nutritional components are improved (Yoshida and Kajimoto, 1988; Marty and Chavez, 1993; Marty et al., 1994; Marsman et al., 1995; Qin et al., 1996; Zhu et al., 1996; Rajko and Szabo, 1997; Dudley- Cash, 1999). Studies by Yoshida and Kajimoto (1988), Marsman et al. (1995), Zhu et al., (1996) and Rajko and Szabo, (1997), clearly advanced soya bean processing technologies but did not include animal feeding trials. Marty and Chavez (1993) and Marty et al. (1994) reported growth response of piglets fed experimental diets where soya beans had been prepared into protein supplements via a variety of processing methods (extrusion, jetsploding, roasting or toasting). Further, animal growth response was a criterion used to assess the quality of single batches of heat processed soybeans, but their experimental design did not permit identi cation of the optimal processing temperature necessary to maximize the animal pen unit response within each processing method evaluated. As a result, the animal pen unit response within the two studies varied appreciably depending on the processing method used, suggesting that animal pen unit response was affected by a combination of factors which included nutritional value, palatability and digestibility, even when the soya bean protein supplements were considered by the researchers to have received adequate heat processing. Qin et al. (1996), showed that experimental variation in feeding steam roasted soya beans to pigs was introduced by variables such as processing temperature, length of processing time, the size and variety of the soya bean, and animal pen unit response to the diet. In the current study we report animal pen unit response of piglets resulting from the variation in nutritional value of soya bean protein supplements prepared from dry roasting whole full-fat soya beans processed at 800 or 900 g kg 1 DM and 110 or 1258C. The objective of this study was to compare the pen unit response of piglets fed soya bean protein supplements prepared by the dry roasting of whole full-fat soya beans at 800 or 900 g kg 1 DM prior to dry roasting at 110 or 1258C, using commercially available onfarm equipment.

3 2. Materials and methods 2.1. Dietary treatments C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105± The composition of diets is presented in Table 1. The International Feed Number (IFN; NAS, 1971) is reported in the text herein for each major feed ingredient used as a dietary energy or protein component. Diets were formulated to contain ground maize (Zea mays) grain (IFN ) as the primary energy source. The soya bean protein supplements prepared and used in the six dietary treatments were as follows. Diet 1, commercial solvent extracted soya bean meal (IFN ) at 900 g kg 1 DM. Diets 2±6 contained the whole full-fat soya beans (IFN ) at either 800 or 900 g kg 1 DM. Speci cally, diet 2 soya beans were at 900 g kg 1 DM when included in the diet as a raw (unheated) protein supplement; diet 3, soya beans were at 900 g kg 1 DM prior to heating to a discharge temperature of 1108C; diet 4, soya beans were at 800 g kg 1 DM prior to heating to a discharge temperature of 1108C; diet 5, soya beans were at 900 g kg 1 DM prior to heating to a discharge temperature of 1258C; and diet 6, soya beans were at 800 g kg 1 DM prior Table 1 Composition of experimental diets Ingredients Control (diet 1) Soya beans (diets 2±6) Ground maize Soya bean meal a 254 ± Whole full-fat soya beans b ± 399 Maize oil 30 ± Dicalcium phosphate (CaHPO 4 ) Limestone Salt Trace minerals c Vitamin premix d Antibiotic e Calculated analyses of feed Crude protein f (g kg 1 ) Metabolizable energy g (MJ kg 1 ) a Crude protein concentration of commercial soya bean meal, 480 g kg 1 as fed basis. b Crude protein concentration of whole full-fat soya beans, 367 g kg 1 as fed basis. c Calcium Carbonate Company, Quincy, IL. Contained 200 mg zinc, 100 mg iron, 55.0 mg manganese, 11.0 mg copper, 1.5 mg iodine, 1.0 mg cobalt, 20.0 mg calcium and 0.10 mg selenium per kg of feed. d Hoffmann LaRoche Company, Nutley, NJ. Supplied 13.2 mg ribo avin, 44.0 mg niacin, 26.4 mg pantothenic acid, mg choline chloride, 22.0 ug Vitamin B 12, 5500 IU Vitamin A, 880 ICU Vitamin D 3 and 22.0 IU Vitamin E per kg of diet. e American Cyanamid Company, Princeton, NJ. Supplied 44.0 mg chlortetracycline, 44.0 mg sulfamethazine and 22.0 mg penicillin per kg of complete diet. f Calculated crude protein from nitrogen (N) analysis (N6.25) of individual grain and protein supplement used as feed in this study, as fed basis. g Calculated metabolizable energy based on published estimates (NRC, 1988) for grain and protein supplements used as feed in this study.

4 108 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105±115 to heating to a discharge temperature of 1258C. The appropriate levels of vitamins and minerals necessary to meet the growth requirements of piglets 5±20 kg BW (NRC, 1988), were included in each of the six dietary treatments as shown in Table Laboratory preparation of soya bean protein supplements The ve laboratory-prepared protein supplements fed were made from aliquots drawn from a large uniform batch of whole full-fat soya beans (183 g ether extract kg 1,DM basis) of the `Bragg' variety; i.e. G. max var. Bragg, grown and harvested at a single location in Alachua County, Florida during a single growing season. The entire quantity of whole raw full-fat soya beans used to prepare diets 2±6 assayed at 897 g kg 1 DM at ambient conditions of temperature, relative humidity and barometric pressure prior to processing. This value was rounded up to 900 g kg 1 DM for simplicity of reporting. The DM content of soya beans fed in diets 4 and 6 was decreased prior to dry roasting by adding 100 g kg 1 (w/w) distilled water to an aliquot of soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM. The soya beans were equilibrated with the water overnight via gentle stirring and tumbling to ensure uniform moisture absorption. The nal DM concentration for soya beans used in diets 4 and 6 prior to roasting assayed at 795 g kg 1 DM and was rounded up to 800gkg 1 DM, again for simplicity of reporting. To minimize potential deterioration from prolonged storage of soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM, those used in diets 4 and 6 were heat processed the morning following overnight equilibration with water. All aliquots of raw soya beans at either 800 or 900 g kg 1 DM were heat processed by an automated commercial Roast-A-Tron (Mix-Mill, Inc., Bluffton, IN) gas- red roaster. Soya beans were roasted at the prescribed temperature control and transit time settings as recommended in the manufacturer's operations manual to achieve the desired discharge temperature as speci ed in diets 3±6. The average transit time through the roaster was 60 s for soya beans processed to a discharge temperature of 1108C, or 90 s for soya beans processed to a discharge temperature of 1258C. When heat processing was completed, the soya beans returned to 90% DM at room temperature, and were ground into a meal of ne particle size before inclusion into their respective diets Commercial soya bean meal The commercial soya bean meal used in the current study was manufactured by the solvent extraction process as outlined by Ensminger et al. (1990). Brie y, full-fat soya beans were crushed, then heated to 468C for 15 min. The crushed heated product was then rolled into akes and passed to an extraction tower where approximately 99% of the soya oil (190 g soya oil kg 1 full-fat soya beans; NRC, 1988) was removed by extraction with hexane. The de-fatted soya bean meal then passed into a drier and was retained for 10 min at 988C. Thereafter, the soya bean akes passed into a toaster where they were retained for 90 min at 1048C, followed by rapid cooling to 388C prior to making a pass through the grinder. The commercial soya bean meal fed in the current study had an ether extract residual of 13 g kg 1 DM. The fat content of the control diet containing the commercial soybean meal was adjusted to that of the diets containing full-fat soybeans by adding corn oil to the nal feed formulation presented in Table 1.

5 2.4. Analytical determinations The DM content both before and after heat processing was determined as outlined by the American Association of Analytical Chemists (AOAC, 1980). Ether extract of the raw soya beans was also determined according to the AOAC (1980). Representative samples of the raw soya beans and the commercial soya bean meal were analyzed for crude protein (nitrogen6.25) content using the procedure for nitrogen determination set forth by Gallaher et al. (1975) for the Technicon Auto Analyzer (Technicon Industrial Systems, 1978). The residual levels of the trypsin inhibitors expressed as milligrams of protease inhibitor per gram (mg g 1 ) of de-fatted soya bean sample was measured by the method of Hamerstrand et al. (1981) both before and after heat processing. Urease activity was measured as change in ph units (DpH) by the method of Caskey and Knapp (1944) Animal feeding trial design One-hundred and eight Yorkshire±HampshireDuroc crossbred piglets with an average initial body weight (BW) of 5 kg were allotted by litter origin, BW and sex to receive one of the six dietary treatments. Each treatment was replicated three times into pen units which contained six piglets each. The feeding trial was conducted over a period of 35 days. All piglets were housed in an enclosed climate controlled nursery equipped with elevated pens having expanded metal oors and wire mesh side panels. Feed and water were offered ad libitum in each pen unit. The BW of individual piglets, and the feed consumption in each pen unit, were measured bi-weekly to permit calculations of average daily gain (ADG), average daily feed intake (ADFI) and the feed-to-gain ratio (F:G) used as animal pen unit response criteria for statistical analyses that compared effects of dietary treatments Statistical analyses C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105± Variability in ADG of piglets was analyzed by least squares means analysis using the general linear model of the statistical analysis system (SAS, 1979). The variables ADFI and F:G were subjected to analysis of variance for a randomized complete block design, where blocks represented replications within dietary treatments. When calculated values for F were signi cant, the Duncan's new multiple range test (Steel and Torrie, 1960) was used to interpret signi cant differences among means for ADFI and F:G. Diets 3±6 were further analyzed as a 22 factorial design evaluating animal pen unit response (ADG, ADFI and F:G) to the dry matter content of soya beans prior to dry roasting, and the effects of dry roasting soya beans at the two selected temperatures used to process the protein supplements. 3. Results 3.1. Pen unit response Table 2 presents the growth response data of piglets assigned the six dietary treatments. The ADG of piglets fed diet 1, containing the commercial soya bean meal as a protein

6 110 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105±115 Table 2 Pen unit response of piglets fed diets containing protein supplements from commercial soya bean meal (SBM, diet 1) or full fat Bragg variety soya beans (diets 2±6) processed at different levels of dry matter and temperature a,b Dietary treatment, diet S.E.M. c Process temperature (8C) n/a Ambient Soya bean dry matter (g kg 1 ) Average initial weight (kg) ± Average nal weight (kg) ± Average daily gain b (kg) 0.33 a 0.08 d 0.06 d 0.13 c 0.17 c 0.25 b 0.02 Average daily feed intake (kg) 0.59 a 0.33 b 0.32 b 0.41 b 0.39 b 0.55 a 0.02 Average feed-to-gain ratio, F:G 1.76 c 4.45 ab 5.23 a 3.09 b 2.33 c 2.21 c 0.41 a Means in the same row with different letters are signi cantly different (P<0.05). b Pen unit least squares means for average daily gain, and means of average daily feed intake and the feed-togain ratio as calculated from the randomized complete block statistical analysis of treatments. c Standard error of mean. supplement was greater (P<0.05) than that of other dietary treatments. By contrast, piglets fed diet 2, containing the unheated raw soya bean meal at 900 g kg 1 DM, or diet 3 with soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM and heated to a discharge temperature of 1108C, had the lowest ADG in the feeding trial. Piglets fed diet 3 also showed similar ADFI and F:G to piglets fed diet 2. When DM content of soya beans was reduced to 800 g kg 1 and heated to a discharge temperature of 1108C, the resulting protein supplement used in diet 4 signi cantly improved (P<0.05) ADG compared with piglets fed diets 2 and 3. The F:G of piglets fed diet 4 also was signi cantly improved (P<0.05) compared with that of piglets fed diet 3, but not those fed diet 2. The ADG of piglets fed diet 5, which contained soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM and heated to a discharge temperature of 1258C, was signi cantly improved (P<0.05) compared to the ADG measured for piglets fed diets 2 and 3, but did not differ from those fed diet 4. The ADFI of piglets fed diets 2±5 did not differ signi cantly. The F:G of piglets fed diet 5 was signi cantly improved (P<0.05) when compared to those fed diets 2 and 3, but not diet 4. The F:G of piglets fed diets 5 and 6 did not differ. Piglets fed diet 6, where soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM were heated to a discharge temperature 1258C, gave the best overall pen unit response among groups fed the laboratory prepared protein supplements. Average daily feed intake was highest and F:G was lowest for piglets fed diets 1 and 6, which did not differ signi cantly from each other Effects of dry matter and temperature The 22 factorial analysis for main effects of DM content of soya beans prior to dry roasting, and processing temperatures on subsequent pen unit response of piglets fed diets 3±6 is presented in Table 3. Piglets fed diets 5 and 6 containing the protein supplements prepared from soya beans heated to a discharge temperature of 1258C had higher ADG (P<0.05), ADFI (P<0.05) and trends for improved F:G than piglets fed diets 3 and 4

7 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105± Table 3 Pen unit response analyzed as a 22 factoral analysis of piglets fed diets containing soya bean protein supplements processed at different dry matter and temperature levels a Temperature (8C) Dry matter (%) S.E.M. b Average initial weight (kg) ± Average nal weight (kg) ± Average daily gain (kg) 0.10 a 0.21 b 0.12 a 0.19 b 0.04 Average daily feed intake (kg) 0.37 a 0.47 b 0.35 a 0.48 b 0.03 Average feed-to-gain ratio, F:G a Means for pen unit response in rows within main effects (temperature and dry matter) with different letters are signi cantly different (P<0.05). b Standard error of mean. where protein supplements were prepared from soya beans heated to a discharge temperature of 1108C. The main effect of lowering DM from 900 to 800 g kg 1 prior to dry roasting soybeans used to prepare protein supplements fed to piglets in diets 4 and 6, was to improve ADG (P<0.05) and ADFI (P<0.05). Lowering the DM content of soya beans prior to dry roasting and preparation of protein supplements fed to pigs in diets 4 and 6 had a tendency to improved the F:G, but mean differences among treatments were not signi cant Trypsin inhibitors and urease activity The levels of trypsin inhibitors and urease activity of soya bean protein supplements used in each of the six diets are presented in Table 4. Soya bean meal with a urease activity between 0.05 and 0.20 DpH units is considered to have received optimum heat processing for feeding all animals species regardless of age (Smith, 1977). Neither heat treatment (110 or 1258C) during the roasting process, nor lowering the DM content of soya beans was effective in lowering the urease activity of the laboratory-prepared soya bean protein supplements used in diets 3±6 to less than 0.25 DpH units. Heating an aliquot of whole soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM to a temperature of 1108C was effective in Table 4 Values for trypsin inhibitors and urease activities of soya bean protein supplements processed at different levels of dry matter and temperature Diet, dry matter, process temperature in 8C Trypsin inhibitors in mg g 1 de-fatted sample Urease activity in units of DpH Diet 2, 900 g kg 1 DM, raw unprocessed Diet 3, 900 g kg 1 DM, heated to 1108C Diet 4, 800 g kg 1 DM, heated to 1108C Diet 5, 900 g kg 1 DM, heated to 1258C Diet 6, 800 g kg 1 DM, heated to 1258C Diet 1, 900 g kg 1 DM, commercial SBM

8 112 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105±115 lowering the trypsin inhibitors and urease activity by 26.0 and 7.6%, respectively. Heating an aliquot of soya beans at 900 g kg 1 DM to a temperature of 1258C or heating an aliquot of soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM to a temperature of 1108C had the similar effect of lowering the trypsin inhibitors by an average of 57.4%, while the DpH for urease activity of soya beans heated to a temperature of 1258C was two-fold less than soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM heated to a temperature of 1108C. Heating an aliquot of soya beans at 800 g kg 1 DM to a temperature of 1258C prior to processing the protein supplement used in diet 6, resulted in reductions of trypsin inhibitors and urease activity of 83.0 and 87.3%, respectively. Of the ve laboratory-prepared protein supplements, the supplement fed in diet 6 had the lowest residual trypsin inhibitors and urease activity, but, these values remained two-fold higher than those of the commercial solvent extracted soya bean meal fed in diet Discussion 4.1. Processing of soya beans The technologies currently available for on-farm processing of whole soya beans consist of; extrusion, jetsploding, microwave heating, micronizing, roasting and toasting (Yoshida and Kajimoto, 1988; Marty and Chavez, 1993; Marty et al., 1994). Each technology differs in application, but all employ energy in the form of heat to inactivate trypsin and chymotrypsin inhibitors, urease, and lectins which represent the more thermolabile anti-nutritive constituents in soya beans (Liener, 1988). The most plausible mechanism by which heat inactivates anti-nutritional factors in legume seeds is by denaturation (Grant, 1989). According to Rackis et al. (1986), a minimum absorbed energy of 1200 J g 1 was suf cient to inactivate the total amount of urease enzyme and an energy of 1670 J g 1 was required to destroy over 95% of the trypsin inhibitor in soya beans. In addition to inactivation of anti-nutritional factors, adequate heat processing improves the digestibility of legume proteins by denaturation which opens the polymerized structures of proteins (van der Poel et al., 1990) and starches (Marty and Chavez, 1993). Inadequately heated soya beans affect digestibility as trypsin and chymotrypsin inhibitors form insoluble complexes in the ileum of piglets and inhibit the action of the proteolytic enzyme trypsin (Rajko and Szabo, 1997). An indicator of adequately heat processed soya beans is the near complete inactivation of urease, but some trypsin inhibitor activity usually remains following the complete inactivation of urease (Smith, 1977), and, as previously stated, soya bean meal having urease activity in the range of 0.05±0.2 DpH has been adequately heat treated for feeding all animal species regardless of age. Therefore, it seems reasonable that this range of urease activity would be acceptable for adequately dry roasted, whole full-fat soya beans fed to piglets in the present study. Other factors are involved in producing acceptable soya bean protein supplements from whole full-fat soya beans. The optimization of temperature, moisture content, particle size and cultivar of soya beans are mentioned as important variables by Melcion and van der Poel (1993), but the desired product is a soya bean protein supplement with inactivated anti-nutritional factors having high

9 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105± availability of essential amino acids (Van Barneveld, 1993). In the current study dry roasting soya beans to a discharge temperature of 110 or 1258C, was more effective in lowering trypsin inhibitors and urease activities when DM content was decreased from 900 to 800 g kg 1 by overnight equilibration with water. These observations are in agreement with those of Yoshida and Kajimoto (1988) who showed that increasing moisture content of soya beans also increased the ef ciency of microwave heating. Similarly, Zhu et al. (1996) showed that increasing the moisture content lowered the protein dispersibility index (PDI), and temperature necessary to inactivate three inherent lipoxygenases in extruded full-fat soya beans. Heat transfer in foods or feeds that are dry roasted occurs by the physical process of conduction (Holman, 1986). The heat energy conducted into the soya beans by the process of dry roasting increased the molecular motion of water molecules and the molecules of other nutrients present. The heat transfer was more ef cient in soya beans with the higher moisture content because water is an excellent conductor of heat. Therefore, with the additional water molecules in motion during the dry roasting of soybeans at 800 g kg 1 DM, as opposed to soybeans at 900 g kg 1 DM, the conductive energy (110 or 1258C) supplied by the roasting equipment was more effective in inactivating trypsin inhibitors and urease Effects of temperature and moisture Data presented in Table 4 suggested that the Bragg variety of full-fat soya beans requires a dry roasting discharge temperature that is 1258C and (or) a heating period of greater than 90 s to inactivate trypsin inhibitors and urease to the extent measured in the 480 g kg 1 crude protein commercial soybean meal fed as a protein supplement in diet 1. The laboratory prepared protein supplements having values for trypsin inhibitors greater than 9.18 mg g 1 or urease activities higher than 0.25 DpH had not received the level of heat treatment necessary to denature trypsin inhibitors adequately and otherwise improve the nutritional value of soya beans to acceptable levels for feeding piglets from 5 to 20 kg BW. Since other experimental parameters were held constant, it is concluded that the depressed ADG response of piglets fed diets 2±5, resulted from protein supplements prepared from inadequately heated soya beans. Decreasing DM content to achieve 800 g kg 1 prior to heating whole soybeans to a temperature of 1258C, was the most effective DM to heat combination of treatments used in the current study for lowering values for trypsin inhibitors and urease activities to levels near those recommended by the American Feed Manufacturer's Association (Smith, 1977). Piglets fed diet 6 displayed signi cantly (P<0.05) lower ADG, but similar and acceptable growth response in terms of ADFI and the F:G ratio as piglets fed the diet 1 containing the commercial soybean meal. 5. Conclusions The DM content of whole full-fat soya beans prior to heat treatment had a signi cant effect on the temperature necessary to adequately denature inherent trypsin inhibitors and lower urease activity. Decreasing the DM content prior to heat treatment represents a

10 114 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105±115 relatively inexpensive but potentially cost effective method (in terms of lowered energy requirement) for non-commercial, on-farm heat processing of full-fat soya beans. Some potential bene ts of this study were; farmers on combination grain and livestock farms where both soya beans and pigs are produced have the option of processing their soya beans into protein supplements and especially during economic cycles when commercial soya bean meal is expensive, demand for whole full-fat soya beans is high, and the available supply is low. Alternately, when the market demand for soya beans is depressed, but market demand and economics for pork production are favorable, on-farm processing of soya bean protein supplements fed to piglets is an option that could add value to the soya bean crop. Finally, the Bragg variety of soya beans used in this study is genetically related to several other soya bean cultivars (Campbell, 1986). Therefore, data generated from the heat processing requirements and subsequent nutrient value of dry roasted Bragg variety soya beans as reported herein might also pertain to the application of the dry roasting process for adequately heat treating related varieties of soya beans. References AOAC, Of cial Methods of Analysis, 13th Edition. Association of Of cial Analytical Chemists, Washington, DC. Campbell, D.R., Factors affecting the nutritional quality of soybean products fed to swine and chicks. Ph.D. Thesis, Animal Science Department, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 184 pp. Caskey Jr., C.D., Knapp, F.C., Method of detecting inadequately heated soybean oil meal. Ind. Eng. Chem. Anal. Ed. 16, 640±641. Dudley-Cash, W.A., Methods for determining quality of soybean meal protein. Feedstuffs 71 (1), 10±11. Ensminger, M.E., Old eld, J.E., Heinemann, W.W., Feeds and Nutrition, 2nd Edition. Ensminger Publishing Company, Clovis, CA, pp. 402±403. Gallaher, R.N., Weldon, C.O., Futral, J.G., An aluminum block digester for plant and soil analysis. Soil Sci. Soc. Am. Proc. 39, 803±804. Grant, G., Anti-nutritional effects of soybean: a review. Prog. Food Nutr. Sci. 13, 317±348. Hamerstrand, G.E., Black, L.T., Glover, J.D., Trypsin inhibitors in soy products: modi cation of the standard analytical procedure. Cereal Chem. 58, 42±45. Holman, J.P., Heat Transfer, 6th Edition. McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, New York, NY, pp. 2±8. Liener, I.E., Antinutritional factors in legume seeds: state of the art. In: Huisman, J., van der Poel, A.F.B., Liener, I.E. (Eds.), Recent Advances of Research in Antinutritional Factors in Legume Seeds. Pudoc Wageningen, The Netherlands, pp. 6±11. Marsman, G.J.P., Gruppen, H., van Zuilichem, D.J., Resink, J.W., Voragen, A.G.J., The in uence of screw con guration on the in vitro digestibility and protein solubility of soybean and rapeseed meals. J. Food Eng. 26, 13±28. Marty, B.J., Chavez, E.R., Effects of heat processing on digestible energy and other nutrient digestibilities of full-fat soybeans fed to weaner, grower and nisher pigs. Can. J. Anim. Sci. 73, 411±419. Marty, B.J., Chavez, E.R., de Lange, C.F.M., Recovery of amino acids at the distal ileum for determining apparent and true ileal digestibilities in growing pigs fed various heat-processed full-fat soybean products. J. Anim. Sci. 72, 2029±2037. Melcion, J.P., van der Poel, A.F.B., Process technology and antinutritional factors: principles, adequacy and process optimization. In: van der Poel, A.F.B., Huisman, J., Saini, H.S. (Eds.), Recent Advances of Research in Antinutritional Factors in Legume Seeds. Proceedings of the 2nd International Workshop on Antinutritional Factors (ANFs) in Legume Seeds, Wageningen, 1±3 December 1993, pp. 419±434. NAS, 1971, Atlas of Nutritional Data on United States and Canadian Feeds. National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC.

11 C.E. White et al. / Animal Feed Science and Technology 87 (2000) 105± NRC, Nutrient requirements of domestic animals. In: Nutrient Requirements of Swine, 9th revised Edition. National Academy of Sciences, National Research Council, Washington, DC. Qin, G., ter Elst, E.R., Bosch, M.W., van der Poel, A.F.B., Thermal processing of whole soya beans: studies on the inactivation of antinutritional factors and effects on ileal digestibility in piglets. Anim. Feed Sci. Technol. 57, 313±324. Rackis, J.J., Wolf, W.I., Baker, E.C., Protease inhibitors in plant foods: content and inactivation. In: Friedmann, M. (Ed.), Nutritional and Toxicological Signi cance of Enzyme Inhibitors in Foods. Plenum Press, New York, pp. 216±220. Rajko, R., Szabo, G., Designing experiments for reducing antinutritive agents in soybean by microwave energy. J. Agric. Food Chem. 45, 3565±3569. SAS, SAS User's Guide. Statistical Analysis System Institute, Inc., Cary, NC. Smith, K.J., Soybean meal: production, composition and utilization. Feedstuffs 49 (3), 22±25. Steel, R.G.D., Torrie, J.H., Principles and Procedures of Statistics. McGraw-Hill, New York, NY. Technicon Industrial Systems, Individual/Simultaneous Determination of Crude Protein, Phosphorus and/ or Calcium in Feeds. Industrial method No A, Tarrytown, NY. Van Barneveld, R.Y., Effect of heating protein on the digestibility, availability and utilization of lysine by growing pigs. Ph.D. Thesis, Department of Agriculture, University of Queensland, Australia, 221 pp. Van der Poel, A.F.B., Blonk, J., Van Zuilichem, D.J., van Oort, M.G., Thermal inactivation of lectins and trypsin inhibitor activity during steam processing of dry beans (Phaseolus vulgaris L.) and effects on protein quality. J. Sci. Food Agric. 53, 215±228. Yoshida, H., Kajimoto, G., Effects of microwave treatment on the trypsin inhibitor and molecular species of triglycerides in soybeans. J. Food Sci. 53 (6), 1756±1760. Zhu, S., Riaz, M.N., Lusas, E.W., Effect of different extrusion temperatures and moisture content on lipoxygenase inactivation and protein solubility in soybeans. J. Agric. Food Chem. 44, 3315±3318.

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