Dietary Soybean Oligosaccharides Addition Increases Growth Performance and Reduces Lipid Deposition by Altering Fecal Short-Chain Fatty Acids Composition in Growing Pigs

Author:

Cao Shanchuan12ORCID,Wang Juan1,Zhao Jianfei1,Li Shuwei34,Tang Wenjie34,Diao Hui34,Liu Jingbo1

Affiliation:

1. School of Life Science and Engineering, Southwest University of Science and Technology, Mianyang 621010, China

2. Department of Animal Resource and Science, Dankook University, Cheonan 31116, Republic of Korea

3. Animal Breeding and Genetics Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Sichuan Animal Science Academy, Chengdu 610066, China

4. Livestock and Poultry Biological Products Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province, Sichuan Animtech Group Co., Ltd., Chengdu 610066, China

Abstract

One hundred and twenty-eight boars and gilts of the Duroc × Landrace × Yorkshire variety with an initial body weight (BW) of 52.49 ± 0.48 kg were used in a randomized complete block design for a 63-day experiment. The four treatment groups were: control diet (CON), CON + 0.2% soybean oligosaccharides (SBOS), CON + 0.4% SBOS, and CON + 0.8% SBOS. The results showed that the average daily weight gain (ADG) was significantly higher in the 0.8% SBOS group than in the CON group on days 0–63 (p < 0.05). Compared with the CON group, adding 0.8% SBOS to the diet significantly increased the carcass weight, dressing percentage, and carcass lean percentage, but decreased the average backfat depth of growing–finishing pigs (p < 0.05). Adding different concentrations (0.2%, 0.4%, and 0.8%) of SBOS to the diet can significantly increase the concentrations of acetate, propionate, and butyrate in feces (p < 0.05). The activities of malic enzyme and fatty acid synthase in the 0.8% group were significantly lower than those in the 0.2% and CON groups (p < 0.05). In summary, 0.8% SBOS supplementation to growing–finishing pigs’ diets can reduce lipid deposition and increase ADG.

Funder

National Pig Technology Innovation Center Pilot Science and Technology Project

Sichuan Science and Technology Program

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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