Healthy rearing with a novel hydrolysed yeast

17-12-2018 | | |
Healthy rearing with a novel hydrolysed yeast. Photo: Henk Riswick
Healthy rearing with a novel hydrolysed yeast. Photo: Henk Riswick

Maintaining gut health and achieving high growth performance are key drivers in modern and economical livestock production. Supplementing diets with a novel hydrolysed yeast product has been shown to efficiently improve these key drivers for the successful rearing of young animals, such as piglets.

Weaning is considered as one of the most significant events in the life of a pig, accompanied by a high incidence of intestinal disturbances and diarrhoea, leading to suppressed growth performance. In modern pig production piglets are abruptly weaned at an early age (21–28 days of age), which is highly unnatural for the piglet. In wildlife conditions the piglet is gradually weaned at 12-17 weeks of age with a higher level of maturity. The reduction in weaning age occurred largely due to economic reasons (e.g. improved sow productivity), but is characterised by a high incidence of intestinal disturbances such as diarrhoea and subsequent poor growth after weaning.

Low feed intake with consequences

The immediate effect of weaning is a dramatic reduction in feed intake. While approximately 50% of weaned piglets started to eat within the first 24 hours post-weaning, in about 10% of piglets no feed intake was observed within the first 48 hours post-weaning observed by Brooks et al. (2001). These different risk factors at weaning lead to malnutrition and marked changes in intestinal physiology, microbiology and immunology. Consequently, weaned piglets are highly susceptible to pathogenic enteric diseases such as post-weaning diarrhoea, which can cause large economic losses. Within the EU pig population, total losses in the rearing period of weaned piglets amount to approximately 3% and a substantial proportion of losses in pig production can be associated with infections via intestinal mucosal surfaces.

Nowadays it is well-known, that a sufficient and stable feed intake in the first days after weaning is one of the key factors in successful piglet rearing. A low feed intake after weaning can negatively affect gut architecture (villus height, villus height:crypt depth ratio), gut barrier function (mucosa, tight junction proteins), microbiota composition (diversity, number of beneficial bacteria), inflammation (intestinal tissue), immune competence (development of adaptive immune system), diarrhoea incidence and growth performance.

Therefore, it is extremely important to use diets, which ensure a high feed intake. Pigs are known to be very taste sensitive and have a relatively large tongue with one of the highest number of taste buds (N = 19,904) in mammalian species. Umami-tasting amino acids, such as glutamic acid, are rich in animal protein sources and have been reported to activate specific taste receptors on the tongue and drive appetite for the diet. Highly palatable and digestible protein sources such as milk powder and porcine blood plasma are known to have positive effects on feed intake and intestinal morphology. But also other diet features, such as a well-balanced profile of essential amino acids (i.e. Lys, Met, Trp and Thr) are important drivers of feed selection and intake in piglets.

Impact of hydrolysed yeast on feed intake

Hydrolysed yeast is a relatively novel feed material in animal nutrition and relies on hydrolysis of yeast products such as Kluyveromyces fragilis. Hydrolysis is a gentle method to preserve all nutrients. Following the hydrolysis process, yeast cells are split and broken down in yeast cell wall components (30%) and yeast extract (70%). Due to their high amounts of umami-taste amino acids, peptides and nucleotides, hydrolysed yeasts are known to improve the palatability of food. The hydrolysis process leads to an increase in the availability of intracellular compounds such as umami-taste amino acids and nucleic acid/nucleotides and consequently enhances feed consumption in the post-weaning period. The most commonly used yeast strains include strains from Saccharomyces spp. of which S. cerevisiae is the most well-known and studied, more commonly known as baker’s yeast. Currently other yeast strains such as Kluyveromyces spp. are getting an increased attention for application in animal nutrition. Compared to S. cerevisiae, yeasts based on K. fragilis are high in crude protein and amino acids, e.g. glutamic acid resulting in a higher potential to improve palatability. Particularly for piglet nutrition, Kluyveromyces yeast seems to be advantageous due to its specific taste.

Figure 1 – High quality protein sources improve feed intake and feed conversion ratio compared to soybean meal based diets.

A recent study investigated the effects of different protein sources such as 3% porcine blood plasma (PBP), 1% hydrolysed yeast (TechnoYeast, TY) and the combination of 2% porcine blood plasma and 1% hydrolysed yeast (BP + TY) on weaner performance compared with a simple soybean-meal (SBM) based diet. Overall performances as well as feed intake after weaning were on a very high level with all different high-quality protein sources. The TY-groups (TY+BP, TY) showed the highest feed intake before and after feed shift, which may indicate an improved gut maturity due to the multiple effects of the yeast product (Figure 1). The well-known drop in feed intake after the withdrawal of blood plasma could also be observed in the current trial, but was not the case in the TY-group. Because of better feed intake after feed shift on d15, piglets from the TY-group had a higher average daily weight gain compared to other groups after feed shift (483 vs. 564 g, P<0.01). a clear economic advantage for ty-diets could be observed due to a lower feed price with the same or even better performance compared to pbp-diet (-8.67%).>

Hydrolysed yeast, a favoured protein source

In conclusion, the hydrolysed yeast product TechnoYeast is an interesting yeast product for application in piglet feed. Umami flavours improve feed palatability and allow high feed intake comparable or even better to blood plasma based diets. The highly digestible proteins and nucleic acids ensure a healthy gut development and growth performance.

Author: Birgit Keimer, Research and Development, Biochem

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