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<mods ID="cjs-201507-0002">
	<titleInfo><title>Optimum proportion of standardized ileal digestible sulfur amino acid to lysine to maximize the performance of 25-50 kg growing pigs fed reduced crude protein diets fortified with amino acids</title></titleInfo>
	<name type="personal">
		<namePart type="family">Zhang</namePart>
		<namePart type="given">G.J.</namePart>
		<role><roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm></role>
	</name>
	<name type="personal">
		<namePart type="family">Thacker</namePart>
		<namePart type="given">P.A.</namePart>
		<role><roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm></role>
	</name>
	<name type="personal">
		<namePart type="family">Htoo</namePart>
		<namePart type="given">J.K.</namePart>
		<role><roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm></role>
	</name>
	<name type="personal">
		<namePart type="family">Qiao</namePart>
		<namePart type="given">S.Y.</namePart>
		<role><roleTerm type="text">author</roleTerm></role>
	</name>
	<typeOfResource>text</typeOfResource>
	<genre>journal article</genre>
	<originInfo><dateIssued>2015</dateIssued></originInfo>
	<language></language>
	<abstract lang="English">The study was conducted to determine the standardized ileal digestible (SID) sulfur amino acid (SAA) to lysine (Lys) ratio required to maximize the performance of 25-50 kg pigs fed reduced crude protein (CP) diets fortified with crystalline amino acids. A total of 360 crossbred (Duroc × (Landrace × Large White)) pigs, weighing 25.6 ± 2.7 kg, were blocked by gender, litter, and initial body weight (BW) and allotted to 1 of 5 dietary treatments with 6 pens per treatment and 12 pigs per pen for a 35-day performance trial. The basal diet was based on corn, soybean meal, and wheat bran and was formulated to be deficient in SAA (50% proportion of SID SAA to Lys). Graded levels of dl-methionine were added to the basal diet at the expense of wheat bran in order to provide 55.6, 60.0, 65.6, or 70.0% proportion of SID SAA to Lys, respectively. A constant SID Lys level of 0.90% was set so that Lys was the second limiting amino acid (AA) in all diets. Average daily gain (ADG) and feed conversion ratio (FCR) improved (linear and quadratic, P &amp;lt; 0.05) with increasing dietary proportion of SID SAA to Lys. Increasing the dietary proportion of SID SAA to Lys decreased the serum urea nitrogen (SUN) level (quadratic, P &amp;lt; 0.05). A two-slope broken-line model estimated the optimum proportion of SID SAA to Lys to be 62.2, 61.5, and 62.3% for maximum ADG and minimum FCR and SUN, respectively, whereas a curvilinear-plateau model yielded an optimum proportion of SID SAA to Lys level of 63.8, 62.5, and 61.5% for maximum ADG and minimum FCR and SUN, respectively. Based on an average of these estimates, we conclude that the proportion of SID SAA to Lys required for 25-50 kg pigs fed low CP diets is 62.3%. This estimate is higher than the NRC (2012) recommendation of 56.1% for 25-50 kg pigs fed normal CP diets.</abstract>
	<subject><topic>amino acid ratio; requirement</topic></subject>
	<identifier type="doi">10.17221/8276-CJAS</identifier>
	<identifier type="uri">https://cjas.agriculturejournals.cz/artkey/cjs-201507-0002.php</identifier>
	<location><url>https://cjas.agriculturejournals.cz/artkey/cjs-201507-0002.php</url></location>
	<relatedItem type="host">
		<titleInfo><title>Czech Journal of Animal Science</title></titleInfo>
		<originInfo><issuance>continuing</issuance></originInfo>
		<part>
			<detail type="volume"><number>60</number></detail>
			<detail type="issue"><number>7</number></detail>
			<extent unit="pages">
				<start>302</start>
				<end>310</end>
			</extent>
			<date>2015</date>
		</part>
		<identifier type="issn">12121819</identifier>
		<genre authority="marc">periodical</genre>
		<genre>academic journal</genre>
	</relatedItem>
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