May 02, 2024

Interpretive Summary: Effects of heating soybeans on postruminal amino acid bioavailability, performance, and ruminal fermentation in lactating cows

Interpretive Summary: Effects of heating soybeans on postruminal amino acid bioavailability, performance, and ruminal fermentation in lactating cows

By: Emily A Petzel, Subash Acharya, Evan C Titgemeyer, Eric A Bailey, Derek W Brake

Soybeans contain antinutritional factors that may influence amino acid (AA) bioavailability to cattle. Holstein cows were used to evaluate if roasting whole soybeans influenced bioavailability of AA in diets containing soybeans. Roasting whole soybeans decreased ruminal ammonia and branched-chain volatile fatty acids. Yet, feeding unroasted soybeans decreased dry matter intake and energy-corrected milk yield. Roasting of soybeans had no impact on measures of postruminal AA bioavailability. Interestingly, however, bioavailability of milk specific proteins was greater than that of a crystalline AA analog of casein. Overall, roasting soybeans does not seem to increase AA bioavailability by mitigating antinutritional factors in soybeans; however, form of postruminal AA (i.e., protein vs. crystalline AA) may be important to efficiently providing metabolizable AA to cows.

Read the full article in the Journal of Animal Science.