Title: Hi how ru
1Welcome
2RUMEN BIOTECHNOLOGY
Annu Yadav, Paras Yadav and Hariom Yadav Animal
Biotechnology Department, 2Animal Biochemistry
Division, National Dairy Research Institute,
Karnal-132001, Haryana, India, Email
yadavhariom_at_gmail.com
3Rumen Biotechnology
- Application of knowledge of fore stomach
fermentation and the use and management of both
natural and recombinant microorganisms to improve
the efficiency of digestion of fibrous feedstuffs
by ruminants. - (Cunningham, 1990)
4Ruminants ?
- A ruminant is any hooved animal that digests its
food in two steps- - a) By eating the raw material and regurgitating a
semi digested form known as cud - b) then eating the cud, a process called
ruminating - Ruminants share another common feature that they
all have an even number of toes. - Examples are cattle, goat, sheep, camel,
giraffe, buffalo and dear etc.
5Digestive tract of Ruminants
6 Reticulum
- Honeycomb lining
- Formation of food bolus
- Regurgitation initiated here
- Collects hardware (nails, wire)
-
- www.vivo.colostate.edu
7Rumen
- Digestion and fermentation vat
- Contains anaerobic microbes
- Papillae lining
- Absorption of VFA
www.vivo.colostate.edu
8Omasum
- Laminae/manyply lining
- muscular folds
- Reduces particle size
- Absorption of water
- Absorption of VFA
-
- www.vivo.colostate.edu
9Abomasum
- True gastric stomach
- Proteolytic enzymes
- Gastric digestion
- Decreased pH from 6 to 2.5
- Denatures proteins
- Kills bacteria and pathogens
- Dissolves minerals (e.g., Ca3(PO4)2)
- www.vivo.colostate.edu
-
10Microbial Population
- Many Microbial Munchers
- The rumen is home to billions and billions of
microbes, including bacteria, protists, fungi,
and viruses. These many different rumen microbes
form a complex community of organisms that
interact with one another, helping the animal
digest its food.
11Fermentation in Ruminants
- Rumen is a fermentation chamber filled with
microorganisms (Gregg, 1995). - Anaerobic process-thus host can absorb energetic
by-products from bacteria fermentation. - Utilizes enzymes produced by rumen microorganisms
to digest the ingested material . - Benefits two distinguished groups host
(ruminant) and the microorganisms.
www.esl.ohio-state.edu
12Rumen Microbes
- Protozoa
- Large (20-200 microns) unicellular organisms
- Ingest bacteria and feed particles
- Engulf feed particles and digest carbohydrates,
proteins and fats - Numbers affected by diet
- (Yokoyama and Johnson, 1988)
13Entodinium (Rumen Protozoa)
14Rumen Microbes
- Fungi
- Known only for about 20 years
- Numbers usually low
- Digest recalcitrant fiber
- www.animsci.agrenv.mcgill.ca/feed
15Bacterial Populations
- Cellulolytic bacteria (fiber digesters)
- digest cellulose
- require pH 6-7
- utilize N in form of NH3
- require S for synthesis of sulfur-containing
amino acids (cysteine and methionine) - produce acetate, propionate, little butyrate, CO2
- predominate from roughage diets
16Contd.
- Amylolytic bacteria (starch, sugar digesters)
- digest starch
- require pH 5-6
- utilize N as NH3 or peptides
- produce propionate, butyrate and lactate
- predominate from grain diets
- rapid change to grain diet causes lactic acidosis
(rapidly decreases pH)
17Contd..
- Methane-producing bacteria
- produce methane (CH4)
- utilized by microbes for energy
- represent loss of energy to animal
- released by eructation
18Improvement of Forage Quality
- Pre-ingestive Methods
- Post-ingestive Methods
19Pre-ingestive Methods
- Reducing lignin content and increasing
fermentable carbohydrate. Increasing available
proteins. - Reducing concentration of secondary compounds.
(Ulyatt, 1993). - Use of exogenous fibrolytic enzymes to improve
feed utilisation.
20Post-ingestive Methods
- Increasing fibre digestion.
- Improving efficiency of nitrogen metabolism.
- Modification of ruminal ecosystems.
- Recombinant ruminal Microorganisms.
- Hoover and Stokes, 1991 McSweeny et al., 1994.
21 GI Microbes in livestock development.
- Microbial degradation of antinutritional
factors. - Tannins Toxic Non-protein amino acids.
- Oxalates
- Fluoroacetate
- Pyrrolizidine
-
- (Allison et al., 1985 Nelson et al., 1995)
22GI Microbial enzymes In Industry
- Tannase in food, beverages, in preparation of
instant tea and as clarifier in fruit juices and
beer. - Phytase as feed additives in monogastrics foods
to increase phosphate utilisation. - Source of restriction enzymes for e.g.. Sru I and
Sru4DI from ruminal selenomonades - Lactobacillus species for disease treatment as
probiotics. -
- (Cheng, 1999).
23Future Prospect and Conclusion
- Provide a natural barrier for controlling the
entry of enteric pathogens into the human food
chain. - Intensive livestock production in the future.
- In various industries apart from the Livestock
production - Easy and economical way to enhance economy of
developing countries. -
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