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      A Review of Effect of Saponins on Ruminal Fermentation, Health and Performance of Ruminants

      Veterinary Sciences
      MDPI AG

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          Abstract

          Saponins are steroid, or triterpene glycoside, compounds found in plants and plant products, mainly legumes. However, some plants containing saponins are toxic. Saponins have both positive and negative roles in animal nutrition. Saponins have been shown to act as membrane-permeabilizing, immunostimulant, hypocholesterolaemic, and defaunating agents in the rumen for the manipulation of ruminal fermentation. Moreover, it has been reported that saponins have impair protein digestion in the gut to interact with cholesterol in the cell membrane, cause cell rupture and selective ruminal protozoa elimination, thus improving N-use efficiency and resulting in a probable increase in ruminant animal performance.

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          Plant food anti-nutritional factors and their reduction strategies: an overview

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            The Role of Ciliate Protozoa in the Rumen

            First described in 1843, Rumen protozoa with their striking appearance were assumed to be important for the welfare of their host. However, despite contributing up to 50% of the bio-mass in the rumen, the role of protozoa in rumen microbial ecosystem remains unclear. Phylogenetic analysis of 18S rDNA libraries generated from the rumen of cattle, sheep, and goats has revealed an unexpected diversity of ciliated protozoa although variation in gene copy number between species makes it difficult to obtain absolute quantification. Despite repeated attempts it has proven impossible to maintain rumen protozoa in axenic culture. Thus it has been difficult to establish conclusively a role of ciliate protozoa in rumen fiber degradation. The development of techniques to clone and express ciliate genes in λ phage, together with bioinformatic indices to confirm the ciliate origin of the genes has allowed the isolation and characterization of fibrolytic genes from rumen protozoa. Elimination of the ciliate protozoa increases microbial protein supply by up to 30% and reduces methane production by up to 11%. Our recent findings suggest that holotrich protozoa play a disproportionate role in supporting methanogenesis whilst the small Entodinium are responsible for much of the bacterial protein turnover. As yet no method to control protozoa in the rumen that is safe and practically applicable has been developed, however a range of plant extract capable of controlling if not completely eliminating rumen protozoa have been described.
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              Methane mitigation from ruminants using tannins and saponins.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Veterinary Sciences
                Veterinary Sciences
                MDPI AG
                2306-7381
                July 2023
                July 10 2023
                : 10
                : 7
                : 450
                Article
                10.3390/vetsci10070450
                10385484
                37505855
                3fc9eb93-9d7b-4f67-8f31-7649f2cdcde7
                © 2023

                https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

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