- Effects of 2-hydroxy-4-methylthiobutyrate on portal plasma flow and net portal appearance of amino acids in piglets.
Effects of 2-hydroxy-4-methylthiobutyrate on portal plasma flow and net portal appearance of amino acids in piglets.
To determine whether portal plasma flow (PPF) and net portal appearance of amino acids (AA) could be affected by 2-hydroxy-4-methylthiobutyrate (HMB), six barrows (35-day-old, 8.6+/-1.4 kg), implanted with arterial, portal and mesenteric catheters, were fed a DL-methionine (as the control) or HMB-supplemented diet once hourly and infused intramesenterically with 1% p-amino hippurate. PPF was numerically 9% higher (P=0.09) in HMB-fed pigs than in controls over a 4-6 h period. Compared with controls, pigs fed the HMB diet had increased (P<0.05) net portal balance and/or appearance of leucine, isoleucine, histidine, arginine and alanine, but had decreased (P<0.05) portal appearance of glutamate over a 6-h period. The concentration of acetate in the lumen of the distal small intestine was higher (P=0.01) in HMB-fed pigs than in controls (25.14 vs. 7.64 mmol/kg). mRNA levels for proglucagon and endothelial nitric-oxide synthase (eNOS) in stomach and proximal small intestine, and mRNA levels for GLP-2 receptor (GLP-2R) in stomach were higher (P<0.05) in HMB-fed pigs compared with those in controls. Collectively, HMB supplementation increased concentrations of short-chain fatty acids in intestinal lumen, expression of proglucagon, GLP-2R, and eNOS genes, and net portal absorption of AA. These novel findings from the study with pigs may also have important implications for intestinal nutrition and health in humans.