scholarly journals Studies on lipid digestion in the preruminant calf. The source of lipolytic activity in the abomasum

1976 ◽  
Vol 36 (3) ◽  
pp. 439-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joyce Toothill ◽  
S. Y. Thompson ◽  
J. D. Edwards-Webb

1. Lipolytic and proteolytic activities and pH values were determined in secretions collected from innervated abomasal pouches and in abomasal contents from preruminant calves given liquid diets.2. No lipolytic activity was detected in pouch secretions collected during 1 h after feeding, though lipolytic activity was present in abomasal contents; pepsin (EC 3.4.23.1) and rennin (EC 3.4.23.4) were present in both pouch secretions and abomasal contents. The pH values of pouch secretions ranged from 1.2 to 1.8 and those of abomasal contents from 4.2 to 5.9.3. When diet was placed directly into the abomasal pouch soon after feeding, the pH values of pouch and abomasal contents decreased similarly (i.e. from 6.3 to approximately 5). Protease activity (U/ml) of pouch contents ranged from 0.1 to 0.8 and that of abomasal contents from 0.1 to 0.2. No lipolytic activity was detected in pouch contents, though abomasal contents contained 0.6 to 1.2 U/ml and when the diet contained milk-fat as the dietary fat source considerable lipolysis of triglycerides containing shorter-chain fatty acids was found.4. It is concluded that there is no significant secretion of lipolytic enzymes by the fundal mucosa and that the lipolysis of triglycerides in the abomasum of the preruminant calf is due predominantly to a lipolytic enzyme in saliva.

2004 ◽  
Vol 186 (17) ◽  
pp. 5790-5798 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jono A. Schmidt ◽  
Glenn F. Browning ◽  
Philip F. Markham

ABSTRACT Mycoplasma hyopneumoniae is the most significant bacterial pathogen of the respiratory tract of swine. p65 is an immunodominant surface lipoprotein of M. hyopneumoniae that is specifically recognized during disease. Analysis of the translated amino acid sequence of the gene encoding p65 revealed similarity to the GDSL family of lipolytic enzymes. To examine the lipolytic activity of p65, the gene was cloned and expressed in Escherichia coli after truncation of the prokaryotic lipoprotein signal sequence and mutagenesis of the mycoplasma TGA tryptophan codons. After treatment with thrombin, the recombinant glutathione S-transferase (GST)-p65 protein yielded a 66-kDa fusion protein cleavage product corresponding in size to the mature p65 protein. The esterase activity of recombinant GST-p65 was indicated by the formation of a cleared zone on tributyrin agar plates and the hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl esters of caproate (pNPC) and p-nitrophenyl esters of palmitate (pNPP). Lipase activity was indicated by the hydrolysis of the artificial triglyceride 1,2-O-dilauryl-rac-glycero-3-glutaric acid resorufin ester. Using pNPC and pNPP as substrates, recombinant GST-p65 had optimal activity between pHs 9.2 and 10.2 and at a temperature higher than 39°C. Calcium ions did not increase the activity of recombinant GST-p65. Rabbit anti-p65 antibodies inhibited the activity of recombinant GST-p65 and also inhibited the growth of M. hyopneumoniae in vitro. Examination of the kinetic parameters of recombinant GST-p65 for the hydrolysis of pNPC and pNPP indicated a preference for the shorter fatty acid chain of pNPC. The physiological and/or pathogenic role of mycoplasma lipolytic enzymes has not been determined, but they are likely to play an important role in mycoplasmas' nutritional requirements for long-chain fatty acids and may reduce the function of lung surfactants in mycoplasma-induced respiratory diseases. This is the first report of the lipolytic activity of a lipid-modified surface immunogen of a mycoplasma.


2002 ◽  
Vol 70 (11) ◽  
pp. 6094-6106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Antje Flieger ◽  
Birgid Neumeister ◽  
Nicholas P. Cianciotto

ABSTRACT We previously showed that Legionella pneumophila secretes, via its type II secretion system, phospholipase A activities that are distinguished by their specificity for certain phospholipids. In this study, we identified and characterized plaA, a gene encoding a phospholipase A that cleaves fatty acids from lysophospholipids. The plaA gene encoded a 309-amino-acid protein (PlaA) which had homology to a group of lipolytic enzymes containing the catalytic signature GDSL. In Escherichia coli, the cloned gene conferred trypsin-resistant hydrolysis of lysophosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylglycerol. An L. pneumophila plaA mutant was generated by allelic exchange. Although the mutant grew normally in standard buffered yeast extract broth, its culture supernatants lost greater than 80% of their ability to release fatty acids from lysophosphatidylcholine and lysophosphatidylglycerol, implying that PlaA is the major secreted lysophospholipase A of L. pneumophila. The mutant's reduced lipolytic activity was confirmed by growth on egg yolk agar and thin layer chromatography and was complemented by reintroduction of an intact copy of plaA. Overexpression of plaA completely protected L. pneumophila from the toxic effects of lysophosphatidylcholine, suggesting a role for PlaA in bacterial detoxification of lysophospholipids. The plaA mutant grew like the wild type in U937 cell macrophages and Hartmannella vermiformis amoebae, indicating that PlaA is not essential for intracellular infection of L. pneumophila. In the course of characterizing plaA, we discovered that wild-type legionellae secrete a phospholipid cholesterol acyltransferase activity, highlighting the spectrum of lipolytic enzymes produced by L. pneumophila.


1967 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 425-438 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Storry ◽  
J. A. F. Rook ◽  
A. J. Hall

1. Two experiments are described in which the effects of dietary fat on the synthesis of milk fat in the dairy cow have been investigated. In the first experiment a change-over design was used with two cows to study the effect of removing a mixed-oil supplement to a basal diet low in fat on the concentration and composition of plasma lipids and on the yield and composition of milk fat.2. Reducing the dietary fat intake from about 430 to 170 g/day caused falls in the concentrations in plasma of phospholipid and of free and esterified cholesterol and, in one cow, also of triglyceride. The changes in composition and concentration of the fatty acids in the plasma triglyceride fraction also reflected changes in dietary intake of fatty acids. No effect of dietary fat intake on the total synthesis of milk fat was observed, but the composition of the milk fat reflected that of the dietary fat, and the yields of lauric, myristic, stearic and oleic acids were decreased in association with a decreased dietary intake of these acids.3. In the second experiment the effect of supplementing a basal diet low in fat with either coconut, red palm or groundnut oil on the composition and yield of milk fat was studied in four cows using a 4 x 4 Latin square design balanced with respect to residual effects.4. With each oil, increasing the dietary fat intake from about 100 to 400 g/day significantly increased the total yield of milk fat. Also, coconut and red palm oils significantly increased the fat content of milk, and groundnut oil the yield of milk.5. With the exception of linoleic and palmitic acids, the increased dietary intake of the major fatty acids characteristic of the various oil supplements led to increased yields of these acids in the milk.


1961 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 195-201 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joyce L. Beare ◽  
E. R. W. Gregory ◽  
D. Morison Smith ◽  
J. A. Campbell

Rats fed corn oil or a mixture of lard and olive oil produced as many offspring as those receiving no fat supplement with a low-fat commercial meal, but the weanling weight was lower. Although rats fed rapeseed oil continued to reproduce they had fewer and smaller offspring than rats fed other diets.The composition of fatty acids in the milk varied with the dietary fat of the mother. Animals receiving the low-fat diet secreted predominantly saturated fatty acids. A high proportion of linoleic acid appeared in the milk when corn oil was fed, and of oleic acid when the mixture of lard and olive oil was fed. Eicosenoic and erucic acids were present in the milk of rats receiving rapeseed oil, but were less prevalent than in the original oil.


1980 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 221-230 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emmanuel Anifantakis ◽  
Margaret L. Green

SummaryLamb and kid rennets were prepared by extraction of dried abomasa with 6% (w/v) NaCl-2% (w/v) H3BO3 and activation of the proenzymes at pH 2·0. Each gave one zone of precipitation on casein-agar gel diffusion, enabling them to be differentiated from calf rennet and pig pepsin. After agarose gel electrophoresis, the proteinase activity of lamb rennet occurred in chymosin and pepsin bands only, whereas kid rennet contained an additional proteinase of intermediate mobility. Relative to their milk-clotting activities, lamb and kid rennets contained less pepsin and were less proteolytic on both haemoglobin at pH 1·8 and casein at pH 5·3 than calf rennet. The milk-clotting activities of lamb and kid rennets increased less with decrease in pH and were more stable to storage at both the pH value of maximum stability and lower pH values than that of calf rennet. Neither cathepsin activity nor lipolytic activity on milk fat was detected in any of the 3 rennets, but lamb rennet caused slight hydrolysis of tributyrin.


2018 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
pp. 3413 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jully Fraga ◽  
Adrian Penha ◽  
Adejanildo da S. Pereira ◽  
Kelly Silva ◽  
Emília Akil ◽  
...  

Lipase immobilized on Yarrowia lipolytica cell debris after sonication of yeast cells (LipImDebri) was used in hydrolysis reaction as a novel strategy to produce lipolyzed milk fat (LMF). Extracellular (4732.1 U/L), intracellular (130.0 U/g), and cell debris (181.0 U/g) lipases were obtained in a 4 L bioreactor using residual frying oil as inducer in 24 h fermentation process. LipImDebri showed a good operational stability retaining 70% of lipolytic activity after the second cycle and 40% after the fourth. The highest degree of hydrolysis (28%) was obtained with 500 mg LipImDebri for 6 h of lipolysis of anhydrous milk fat. LMF produced with LipImDebri presented high contents of oleic (35.2%), palmitic (25.0%), and stearic (15.4%) acids and considerable amounts of odor-active short and medium chain fatty acids (C:4–C:10) (8.13%).


1968 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 223-235 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Steele ◽  
J. H. Moore

SummaryThe effects of the isocaloric replacement of part of the dietary concentrate mixture by either tallow or cottonseed oil on the yield and composition of the milk fat was investigated in 2 feeding experiments with a total of 26 cows in midlactation. The concentrates were given with high- or low-roughage diets that supplied either 9·1–9·5 or 1·8–3·2kg hay/day.In expt 1, the addition of cottonseed oil to the high-roughage diet increased the yield of milk fat during the first 8 days but decreased it during the last 4 days of a 28-day feeding period. In contrast, the inclusion of tallow in the high-roughage diet resulted in an increased yield of milk fat that was sustained throughout the period of 28 days. In expt 2, the intake of dietary fat was less than it was in expt 1 and the inclusion of tallow or cottonseed oil in either the high- or low-roughage diets had little effect on the yield of milk fat.The inclusion of either fat in the diet increased the yields and percentages of stearic and oleic acids and, in general, decreased the yields and percentages of the medium-chain fatty acids (10:0, 12:0 and 14:0) in the milk fat. The addition of tallow to the diet did not appear to alter the yields of the short-chain fatty acids (C4–C8, 4:0, 6:0 and 8:0) in the milk fat. When the low-roughage diets resulted in a decreased yield of milk fat, the secretion of all the fatty acids in the milk fat was reduced, but the reduction in the secretion of oleic acid was less than the reductions in the secretions of the other constituent fatty acids.


Author(s):  
P.A. Martin ◽  
D.G. Chamberlain ◽  
J.J. Choung ◽  
S. Robertson

Adding appropriate fats to diets for dairy cows has the potential to improve the acceptability of dairy products to the health-conscious consumer by increasing the proportion of monounsaturated fatty acids in milk fat. However, concentrations of protein in milk are often concurrently depressed. In these respects responses to fat resemble those seen in animals in negative energy balance, where the contribution of fatty acids mobilized from adipose tissue to milk fat synthesis leads to similar changes in milk fat composition, and milk protein concentrations are relatively low.These similarities give rise to two questions: (i) do the metabolic adaptations during negative energy balance influence the utilization of dietary fat for milk fat synthesis, and (ii) is the mechanism whereby milk protein is depressed the same in both cases? As a preliminary investigation of this, an experiment was conducted to compare the effects of dietary fat supplementation on performance of lactating cows either mobilizing or depositing body tissue.


Molecules ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 26 (6) ◽  
pp. 1542
Author(s):  
Andre Mong Jie Ng ◽  
Hongfang Zhang ◽  
Giang Kien Truc Nguyen

Lipases and esterases are important catalysts with wide varieties of industrial applications. Although many methods have been established for detecting their activities, a simple and sensitive approach for picogram detection of lipolytic enzyme quantity is still highly desirable. Here we report a lipase detection assay which is 1000-fold more sensitive than previously reported methods. Our assay enables the detection of as low as 5 pg and 180 pg of lipolytic activity by direct spotting and zymography, respectively. Furthermore, we demonstrated that the detection sensitivity was adjustable by varying the buffering capacity, which allows for screening of both high and low abundance lipolytic enzymes. Coupled with liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry, our method provides a useful tool for sensitive detection and identification of lipolytic enzymes.


2000 ◽  
Vol 18 (No. 5) ◽  
pp. 175-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Vyletělová ◽  
J. Ficnar ◽  
O. Hanuš

Effects of thermostable lipolytic enzymes Pseudomonas fluorescens 66 ZB in pasteurized milk on concentration of free fatty acids (VMK) in milk were studied in selected milk samples. Identical bulk milk samples were analysed by the method specified in previous papers (Vyletělová et al. 1999a, b, 2000). Reference milk samples (without bacterial strains) and the experimental ones (containing Ps. fl. 150 th. CFU/ml and 2800 th. CFU/ml, resp.) were stored at 6.5°C and 14°C and analysed at regular time intervals (24 h) – Table 1. An extractive-titric method (Kadlec et al. 1996; Table 2 and Fig. 2) was used for monitoring of fatty acid (MK) liberation. Precise analyses of MK and VMK were made by the chromatographic method (Figs. 1, 3 and 4). Medium-chain fatty acids (C12–C16) are liberated first of all; short-chain acids (C6–C10) were found sporadically or in very small quantities (Table 2). Dissociation constant of the specific fatty acid liberated from milk fat affects principally relationships between pH and free fatty acid concentration. The predominating proportion of long-chain acids in liberated fatty acid formation is associated with lower reduction of pH as compared to the predomination of fatty acids with shorter chains associated with more substantial reduction of pH. In our study, a rapid decrease of pH was noted before 168 h (Table 24); this corresponds to low concentrations of short-chain free fatty acids. Vyletělová et al. (2000) found significant relations between pH and contents of VMK (measured by the extractive-titric method); in some samples, correlation coefficients amounted to r = –0.93*** (P £ 0.001). The extractive-titric method analysing VMK concentrations (mmol/kg milk fat) provides results characterized by a systematic rise (e.g., 32.0 mmol/kg instead of 13.0 mmol/kg in raw milk). According to Kratochvíl (1992) 20 mmol VMK/kg milk fat signalized the starting point characterizing flavour degradation of milk caused by activities of fatty acids C12–C14 above all; the transformed value (respecting specifics of the extractive-titric method) amounts to 49 mmol/kg. In case of higher storage temperature a significant break is found after 144 h; in case of lower temperature this break is after 192 h (Table 2). Limits determining potential lipolytic modifications of milk flavour (RLZCHV) as related to specific samples and temperatures at VMK levels amounting to 49 mmol/kg or 20 mmol/kg are outlined in Fig. 2. Milk samples No. 5 and No. 6 stored at higher temperature surpassed this risk limit at 56 h and 64 h, respectively (Table 2, Fig. 2). On the contrary, milk samples stored temperatures corresponding to the standard storage temperature (storage of raw milk, transport, storage of pasteurized milk) surpass the mentioned risk level after 90 h and 140.5 h. Obtained results document the predominant role of storage temperature in the whole complex (production and processing of milk as a raw material or an intermediate product); evident differences in contamination rates (105 an 106) can be characterized as secondary effects in this case (Table 2). As related to practical conditions, the mentioned facts imply immediate processing of raw milk and pasteurized milk. This postulate must be respected namely by dairy plants producing delicate milk products. Vyletělová et al. (2000) found a notable VMK increase/24 h (7–11 mmol/kg milk fat) under specific temperatures and microbial contamination.


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