Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler

This study aimed to investigate the effect of guanidinoacetic acid (GAA) with different protein levels in feed on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler chicken. GAA is the only direct precursor of creatine and is involved in the synthesis of bioenergy cellular....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Rahmawati, D., Hanim, C.
Format: Article PeerReviewed
Language:English
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282798/1/Chanim.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282798/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149030113&doi=10.14710%2fjitaa.47.4.265-276&partnerID=40&md5=f093ba94c25afb152ce8af6c61b1b940
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Institution: Universitas Gadjah Mada
Language: English
id id-ugm-repo.282798
record_format dspace
spelling id-ugm-repo.2827982023-11-16T07:49:15Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282798/ Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler Rahmawati, D. Hanim, C. Livestock This study aimed to investigate the effect of guanidinoacetic acid (GAA) with different protein levels in feed on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler chicken. GAA is the only direct precursor of creatine and is involved in the synthesis of bioenergy cellular. This research used 1.176 day-old chicks of the Lohmann Indian River strain that were reared for 35 days. The supplementation effect was investigated using six treatments, i.e., two levels of feed protein and three levels of GAA, with seven replications. Broiler chickens were fed with 23 and 21 crude protein during the pre-starter phase, 21 and 19 during the starter phase, and 19 and 17 during the finisher phase, with a GAA addition of 0 g/ton, 600 g/ton, and 1200 g/ton, respectively. The result showed GAA supplementation with different protein levels reduced triglyceride (P<0,05), cholesterol levels in serum (P<0,05), increased surface area of the microvilli (P<0,05), pH of breast meat (P<0,05), but did not affect the chemical quality of breast meat (P>0,05). In conclusion, GAA supplementation in different level protein diets increased the surface area of the microvilli, pH of breast meat, reduce serum cholesterol and triglycerides, without affecting the chemical quality of broiler meat. © 2022 Diponegoro University. All rights reserved. 2022 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282798/1/Chanim.pdf Rahmawati, D. and Hanim, C. (2022) Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler. Journal of the Indonesian Tropical Animal Agriculture, 47 (4). 265 – 276. https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149030113&doi=10.14710%2fjitaa.47.4.265-276&partnerID=40&md5=f093ba94c25afb152ce8af6c61b1b940
institution Universitas Gadjah Mada
building UGM Library
continent Asia
country Indonesia
Indonesia
content_provider UGM Library
collection Repository Civitas UGM
language English
topic Livestock
spellingShingle Livestock
Rahmawati, D.
Hanim, C.
Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
description This study aimed to investigate the effect of guanidinoacetic acid (GAA) with different protein levels in feed on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler chicken. GAA is the only direct precursor of creatine and is involved in the synthesis of bioenergy cellular. This research used 1.176 day-old chicks of the Lohmann Indian River strain that were reared for 35 days. The supplementation effect was investigated using six treatments, i.e., two levels of feed protein and three levels of GAA, with seven replications. Broiler chickens were fed with 23 and 21 crude protein during the pre-starter phase, 21 and 19 during the starter phase, and 19 and 17 during the finisher phase, with a GAA addition of 0 g/ton, 600 g/ton, and 1200 g/ton, respectively. The result showed GAA supplementation with different protein levels reduced triglyceride (P<0,05), cholesterol levels in serum (P<0,05), increased surface area of the microvilli (P<0,05), pH of breast meat (P<0,05), but did not affect the chemical quality of breast meat (P>0,05). In conclusion, GAA supplementation in different level protein diets increased the surface area of the microvilli, pH of breast meat, reduce serum cholesterol and triglycerides, without affecting the chemical quality of broiler meat. © 2022 Diponegoro University. All rights reserved.
format Article
PeerReviewed
author Rahmawati, D.
Hanim, C.
author_facet Rahmawati, D.
Hanim, C.
author_sort Rahmawati, D.
title Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
title_short Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
title_full Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
title_fullStr Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
title_full_unstemmed Supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
title_sort supplementation of guanidinoacetic acid in feed with different levels of protein on intestinal histomorphology, serum biochemistry, and meat quality of broiler
publishDate 2022
url https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282798/1/Chanim.pdf
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/282798/
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85149030113&doi=10.14710%2fjitaa.47.4.265-276&partnerID=40&md5=f093ba94c25afb152ce8af6c61b1b940
_version_ 1783956339589906432