Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-gb8f7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T19:16:52.926Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Diet–animal fractionation of nitrogen stable isotopes reflects the efficiency of nitrogen assimilation in ruminants

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2015

G. Cantalapiedra-Hijar*
Affiliation:
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR 1213 INRA-VetAgroSup, Unité Mixte de Recherches sur les Herbivores, 63122St Genès Champanelle, France
I. Ortigues-Marty
Affiliation:
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR 1213 INRA-VetAgroSup, Unité Mixte de Recherches sur les Herbivores, 63122St Genès Champanelle, France
B. Sepchat
Affiliation:
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR 1213 INRA-VetAgroSup, Unité Mixte de Recherches sur les Herbivores, 63122St Genès Champanelle, France
J. Agabriel
Affiliation:
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, UMR 1213 INRA-VetAgroSup, Unité Mixte de Recherches sur les Herbivores, 63122St Genès Champanelle, France
J. F. Huneau
Affiliation:
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, CRNH-IdF, UMR914 Unité Physiologie de la Nutrition et du Comportement Alimentaire, Paris, France AgroParisTech, CRNH-IdF, UMR914 UMR914 Unité Physiologie de la Nutrition et du Comportement Alimentaire, Paris, France
H. Fouillet
Affiliation:
Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique, CRNH-IdF, UMR914 Unité Physiologie de la Nutrition et du Comportement Alimentaire, Paris, France AgroParisTech, CRNH-IdF, UMR914 UMR914 Unité Physiologie de la Nutrition et du Comportement Alimentaire, Paris, France
*
*Corresponding author: G. Cantalapiedra-Hijar, email [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

The natural abundance of 15N in animal proteins (δ15Nanimal) is greater than that in the diet consumed by the animals (δ15Ndiet), with a discrimination factor (Δ15N = δ15Nanimal− δ15Ndiet) that is known to vary according to nutritional conditions. The objectives of the present study were to test the hypothesis that Δ15N variations depend on the efficiency of nitrogen utilisation (ENU) in growing beef cattle, and to identify some of the physiological mechanisms responsible for this N isotopic fractionation in ruminants. Thus, we performed the regression of the Δ15N of plasma proteins obtained from thirty-five finishing beef cattle fed standard and non-conventional diets against different feed efficiency indices, including ENU. We also performed the regression of the Δ15N of different ruminant N pools (plasma and milk proteins, urine and faeces) against different splanchnic N fluxes obtained from multi-catheterised lactating dairy cows. The Δ15N of plasma proteins was negatively correlated with feed efficiency indices in beef cattle, especially ENU (body protein gain/N intake) and efficiency of metabolisable protein (MP) utilisation (body protein gain/MP intake). Although Δ15N obtained from different N pools in dairy cows were all negatively correlated with ENU, the highest correlation was found when Δ15N was calculated from plasma proteins. Δ15N showed no correlation with urea-N recycling or rumen NH3 absorption, but exhibited a strong correlation with liver urea synthesis and splanchnic amino acid metabolism, which points to a dominant role of splanchnic tissues in the present N isotopic fractionation study.

Type
Full Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2015 

The human population is expected to increase about 34 % by 2050, creating a 50 % increase in the demand for dairy and beef products on existing natural and land resources( 1 ). In this context, current livestock production systems need to evolve towards improving the efficiency with which ruminants transform feeds into foods (feed conversion efficiency (FCE); body-weight (BW) gain or milk yield/DM intake), which is lower and more variable than in other farmed species( Reference Calsamiglia, Ferret and Reynolds 2 ). However, in practice, assessing animal FCE is costly and laborious, mainly due to the need to accurately quantify individual feed intakes over a long period.

The efficiency of nitrogen utilisation (ENU; animal N gain or milk N secretion/N intake) is an important component of FCE in growing beef cattle( Reference Wheadon, McGee and Edwards 3 ) and dairy cows( Reference Phuong, Friggens and de Boer 4 ), and is also directly related to environmental N pollution associated with livestock production( Reference Castillo, Kebreab and Beever 5 ). However, ENU is even more laborious and difficult to measure than FCE because it also requires analysis of feed N content, refusal N content, and animal BW gain or milk yield. Predictions of ENU require good knowledge of the multiple factors that affect N partitioning across digestive and metabolic compartments, or alternatively the use of indicators that reflect N utilisation at rumen and whole-body levels.

N naturally exists in the form of two stable isotopes, i.e. light 14N and the far less abundant heavy 15N. It has long been known that the natural relative abundance of 15N (δ15N) in human or animal tissues is greater than that in the diet they consume( Reference Gaebler, Vitti and Vukmirovich 6 , Reference Deniro and Epstein 7 ). This diet–animal 15N fractionation or δ15N difference between an individual and its diet (Δ15N = δ15Nanimal− δ15Ndiet) has traditionally been considered relatively constant (the so-called ‘trophic shift’: Δ15N approximately 3·4 ‰( Reference Minagawa and Wada 8 )), allowing ecologists to infer ‘what-eats-what’ within the food web and thus elucidate part of the trophic structure of the ecosystem. However, results from the last few decades have shown high variability in Δ15N in response to a variety of nutritional and physiopathological conditions in human subjects and animals( Reference Vanderklift and Ponsard 9 , Reference Robbins, Felicetti and Sponheimer 10 ) that is sometimes even higher than the assumed value of the trophic shift( Reference Sponheimer, Robinson and Ayliffe 11 ). This may suggest that Δ15N variations could reflect modulations of certain N metabolic fluxes induced by different environmental conditions. In the last few years, Δ15N has been related to protein gain in pregnant women( Reference Fuller, Fuller and Sage 12 ) and efficiency of feed N conversion to body protein in monogastric animals( Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 Reference Poupin, Bos and Mariotti 15 ). After first emerging as a promising biomarker of N partitioning in ruminants( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 , Reference Wattiaux and Reed 17 ), this same methodology has successfully been applied to predict ENU in lactating dairy cows( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 ) and to predict FCE in growing cattle fed a unique diet( Reference Wheadon, McGee and Edwards 3 ). However, other well-controlled ruminant experiments( Reference Cheng, Kim and Merry 19 , Reference Cheng, Nicol and Dewhurst 20 ) have found no relationship between ENU and Δ15N, highlighting the need for further research. Despite the huge potential value of Δ15N in a range of scientific investigations, there has been little focus on the underlying physiological and biochemical mechanisms( Reference Adams and Sterner 21 ). Many authors, especially ecologists, have stressed the need to understand the physiological basis of diet–animal 15N fractionation( Reference Vanderklift and Ponsard 9 Reference Sponheimer, Robinson and Ayliffe 11 , Reference Martinez del Rio and Carleton 22 ) by identifying the fractionating pathways involved so as to better understand the underlying mechanisms and significance of Δ15N variability( Reference Gannes, Martinez del Rio and Koch 23 ). Thus, we set out to (1) demonstrate a relationship between Δ15N and ENU in growing beef cattle fed contrasting diets used in livestock farming, and (2) identify some of the potential physiological mechanisms responsible for the diet–animal fractionation of N stable isotopes by means of a metabolic experiment using multi-catheterised dairy cows. To achieve these goals, we used samples and individual data from two published experiments( Reference Sepchat, Ortigues-Marty and Mialon 24 , Reference Cantalapiedra-Hijar, Lemosquet and Rodriguez-Lopez 25 ).

Materials and methods

The experiments were conducted in compliance with the National Legislation on Animal Care (Certificate of Authorization to Experiment on Living Animals, No. 004495, Ministry of Agriculture, France).

Expt 1 (beef cattle)

A total of thirty-six post-weaning Charolais young bulls (initial BW 360 (sem 33) kg, average age approximately 8 months) were used in a randomised complete block design experiment. After weaning, animals were allotted into four homogeneous groups (n 9 per group) according to pre-weaning performances. Each group was randomly assigned to one of four experimental diets, which were based on two silage types (S), either maize silage or pre-wilted grass silage. Diets were iso-net energy and iso-crude protein (CP) in composition but supplied at two different intake levels (I; ad libitum (high) v. restricted (low)) to promote theoretical average daily gains of 1600 and 1400 g/d, respectively, according to the INRA (Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique) feeding system( 26 ). Restricted intake levels were achieved by limiting concentrate supply, with forage supplied ad libitum in all the four dietary treatments. Diets based on maize silage were supplemented with a standard concentrate (on average, 19 % maize grain, 37 % wheat, 40 % rapeseed meal and 2 % urea, on a DM basis), while diets based on grass silage were supplemented with by-products (on average, 54 % citrus pulp and 44 % wheat-based dry distiller grains, on a DM basis). The animals were housed in free stalls equipped with electronic gates (Dairy gate®; EFEI) to measure individual daily feed intake. Forages were distributed once daily, whereas concentrates were supplied twice at about 08.00 and 16.00 hours. The experiment was preceded by a 4-week transition period to allow the animals to adapt to the treatment diets. All the young bulls were slaughtered at a carcass weight constant endpoint (420 (sem 11) kg, corresponding to 705 (sem 22) kg live weight), and, therefore, average time to slaughter varied according to the treatment diets from 202 to 251 d. The first bull slaughtered was on 21 May, and from then on, four to six bulls were slaughtered every week until 3 July. Average feed efficiencies for each dietary treatment have been reported previously in Sepchat et al. ( Reference Sepchat, Ortigues-Marty and Mialon 24 ), and individual values were used here for correlation analysis with isotopic measurements.

The animals were weighed and feeds were individually sampled fortnightly. Daily amounts of forages and concentrates as well as individual refusals, if any, were precisely weighed to calculate individual feed intakes throughout the experiment. DM was measured twice per week for ingredients and daily for refusals (103°C, 48 h). Feed samples pooled over the whole experiment were stored at − 20°C before analysis.

Subcutaneous adipose tissue was sampled to determine the diameter of adipose cells and, thus, the empty body fat weight at the beginning of the trial. At baseline, all animals were biopsied from the middle of a triangle formed by the tail base, ischial tuberosity and last lumbar vertebrae under local anaesthesia (4 ml Lidocaine®/cow).

Blood samples from all animals were collected by jugular venepuncture the day before the first slaughter using a 10 ml blood Vacutainer tube containing sodium heparin. Blood samples were immediately stored on ice until centrifugation (2500  g for 20 min at 4°C) to separate the plasma, which was stored at − 80°C until plasma protein isolation and N isotopic analysis of natural abundance.

At slaughter, empty BW and carcass weight were recorded. Kidneys, heart and pelvic fat (visceral fat) as well as subcutaneous fat were removed and weighed to measure the fat content of the non-carcass compartment. Tissue dissection of the sixth rib was conducted to estimate carcass fat content according to the method described by Robelin & Geay( Reference Robelin and Geay 27 ).

Expt 2 (dairy cows)

A total of five multiparous Jersey cows in mid-lactation, averaging 365 (sem 28) kg BW and 78 (sem 12) d in milk at the onset of the experiment were used in a 4 × 4 Latin square design, with the fifth cow used as an extra observation( Reference Cantalapiedra-Hijar, Lemosquet and Rodriguez-Lopez 25 ). Chronic indwelling catheters were surgically implanted into the major splanchnic vessels before peak lactation. We formulated four isoenergetic diets to test the effects of dietary CP content (low (12·0 %) and normal (16·5 %)) and dietary carbohydrate composition (CHO; 350 g starch and 310 g neutral detergent fibre/kg DM (starch diets), and 45 g starch and 460 g neutral detergent fibre/kg DM (fibre diets)). Diet composition, feed distribution, infusions and sampling procedures have been detailed in Cantalapiedra-Hijar et al. ( Reference Cantalapiedra-Hijar, Lemosquet and Rodriguez-Lopez 25 ). The dairy cows were subjected to four experimental periods lasting 27 d each. Average net splanchnic fluxes of nitrogenous fractions as well as milk N efficiency have been reported in the study of Cantalapiedra-Hijar et al. ( Reference Cantalapiedra-Hijar, Lemosquet and Rodriguez-Lopez 25 ). Individual values were used here for the analysis of correlations with isotopic measurements. Measured net portal fluxes of NH3-N and urea-N are considered here as proxies for rumen NH3 absorption and urea-N recycling( Reference Lapierre, Berthiaume and Raggio 28 ), respectively, while the net hepatic flux of urea-N and the splanchnic irreversible loss rate of amino acids are termed ‘liver urea synthesis’ and ‘splanchnic amino acid metabolism’, respectively.

Amino acid flux (irreversible loss rate or unidirectional flux representing the amino acid flux towards protein synthesis and oxidation) metabolised by the splanchnic tissues (portal-drained viscera (PDV) and liver) was measured using an isotopic dilution method with continuous infusion of [1-13C]Leu and [2H5]Phe( Reference Savary-Auzeloux, Kraft and Bequette 29 ). On day 26 of each period, a silicone rubber catheter was inserted into one jugular vein, and on day 27, a sterile solution containing 9·0 g/l of [1-13C]Leu and 4·2 g/l of [2H5]Phe (99 atom % excess; Cambridge Isotope Laboratories, Inc.) was infused (Harvard apparatus, Models 22 and PHD2000) via a jugular catheter at the rate of 2·5 (sem 0·14) mmol/h for 8 h (08.00 to 16.00 hours) after a priming dose of 2·5 mmol. Blood was collected from the mesenteric artery and from portal and hepatic veins into heparinised syringes twice during the hour preceding the infusion and then hourly from 3 to 8 h after the start of tracer infusion to determine plasma free [1-13C]Leu and [2H5]Phe enrichments by GC–MS. In addition, blood from the mesenteric artery, urine (acidified (pH < 2) with 1000 ml of 1·9 m-H2SO4), faeces and milk were also collected before the tracer infusion.

Laboratory analysis

Adipose tissue samples were fixed with OsO4, as described previously( Reference Robelin 30 ). Adipocytes were dispersed in 8 m-urea solution and examined by microscopy to determine the diameter of approximately 300 adipose cells.

Before analysis, feed and refusal samples were thawed, dried at 60°C for 48 h and ground to 1 mm. The DM and Kjeldahl N contents of the samples were determined according to the Association of Official Analytical Chemists( 31 ). Dietary metabolisable protein (MP) contents were calculated from the chemical composition of the analysed ingredients( 26 ).

For metabolic tracer analysis across the splanchnic tissues, plasma free [2H5]Phe and [1-13C]Leu enrichments were determined by GC–MS (Trace GC/Automass Multi, Thermofinnigan) after isolation of amino acids by cation exchange (AG-50 H+ resin; Bio-Rad). Before isotopic analysis of natural abundance levels, plasma and milk samples stored at − 80°C were thawed at 4°C overnight and their protein fraction was isolated by precipitation with sulfosalicylic acid (200 μl into 2 ml of sample; 1 g/ml). After 1 h storage at 4°C and centrifugation (4500  g for 20 min at 4°C), the supernatant and pellet were separated. The pellet was rinsed three times with MilliQ water and then freeze-dried. Furthermore, bulk faecal and urine samples were analysed for N stable isotopic analysis of natural abundance (δ15N).

Alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase plasma concentrations were analysed enzymatically using kinetic test kits (RC1160-04 and RC1157-02, respectively) provided by Sobioda.

Natural abundance analysis of nitrogen stable isotopes

The N stable isotopic composition (δ15N, i.e. natural relative abundance of the rare stable isotope of N) of plasma protein and diet ingredients (dairy cow and beef cattle experiments) and of milk protein, faeces and urine (dairy cow experiment) was determined using an isotope-ratio mass spectrometer (Isoprime; VG Instruments) coupled to an elemental analyser (EA Vario Micro Cube; Elementar). Internal standards (tyrosine) were included in every run to correct for possible variations in the raw values determined by the mass spectrometer. Typical replicate measurement errors for these reference materials were ± 0·1 ‰. Results are expressed using the delta notation according to the following equation:

$$\begin{eqnarray} \delta ^{15}N = (( R _{sample}/ R _{standard}) - 1)\times 1000, \end{eqnarray}$$

where R sample and R standard are the N isotope ratio between the heavier isotope and the lighter isotope (15N:14N) for the sample being analysed and the internationally defined standard (atmospheric N2, R standard= 0·0036765), respectively, and δ is the delta notation in parts per 1000 (‰) relative to the standard. The N percentages in the metabolic pools and diet ingredients analysed by elemental analyser-isotope ratio mass spectrometry (EA-IRMS) were determined using the elemental analyser, with tyrosine as the standard.

Calculations and statistical analysis

Protein gain

At the onset of the experiment, empty body weight (EBW0) was estimated from live weight (LW0) according to the allometric equation proposed by Robelin & Daenicke( Reference Robelin and Daenicke 32 ). Total adipose tissue weight (TAD0, kg) and empty body lipid weight (LIP0, kg) were estimated via the adipose cell diameter (ACD) using equations proposed by Garcia & Agabriel( Reference Garcia and Agabriel 33 ), i.e.

$$\begin{eqnarray} TAD_{0} = 5.211\times exp^{(0.0114\,\times \,ACD)}, \end{eqnarray}$$
$$\begin{eqnarray} LIP_{0} = 1 .134\times TAD _{0}^{0.992}. \end{eqnarray}$$

Empty body protein weight at the onset of the experiment (PROT0, kg) was calculated from EBW0 and LIP0 as follows:

$$\begin{eqnarray} PROT_{0} = 0.2\times (EBW_{0} - LIP_{0}). \end{eqnarray}$$

Carcass fat content was estimated from the tissue dissection of the sixth rib( Reference Robelin and Geay 27 ) and the measured EBW0 and fat content of the non-carcass compartment. Total adipose tissue weight at slaughter (TAD1) equals measured non-carcass fat content plus estimated carcass fat content. Empty body protein weight at slaughter (PROT1, kg) was deduced from TAD1 as indicated before. Whole-body protein gain was finally calculated as PROT1− PROT0.

Feed efficiency indices

The theoretical MP requirement for maintenance in the beef cattle experiment was calculated as 3·25 g of MP/kg of mean metabolic BW throughout the experiment( 26 ) whereas the MP intake available for protein gain was calculated as MP intake minus theoretical MP for maintenance. Energy-corrected milk yield (ECM, kg/d) in the dairy experiment was calculated to account for differences in milk composition (g/d) as follows:

$$\begin{eqnarray} ECM = ((0.038)\times crude fat + 0.024\times CP + 0.017\times lactose)/3.14. \end{eqnarray}$$

FCE was calculated as whole-body gain (beef) or ECM yield (dairy) divided by DM intake. ENU was calculated as total whole-body protein gain (beef) or milk N yield (dairy) per feed N intake. The efficiency of metabolisable energy utilisation (EMEU) or efficiency of metabolisable protein utilisation (EMPU) was calculated similarly, but the input is expressed as metabolisable energy and MP intake, respectively. Finally, the efficiency of metabolisable protein utilisation for gain (EMPUg) was calculated as whole-body protein gain divided by MP intake available for growth.

Isotopic measures

The irreversible loss rate of leucine in the PDV and phenylalanine in the liver was calculated as detailed in Savary-Auzeloux et al. ( Reference Savary-Auzeloux, Kraft and Bequette 29 ), taking the artery and hepatic vein as the amino acid precursor pool for PDV and liver measures, respectively.

Δ15N was calculated as δ15N of the considered pool (plasma and milk proteins, urine and faeces) minus δ15N of the diet, where δ15N of the diet was calculated as the average of δ15N of each ingredient weighted by the percentage of N the ingredient represents in the diet.

Statistical analyses

All statistical analyses were performed using R software (version 3·0·1)( 34 ). For the beef cattle experiment, a linear model was used as follows:

$$\begin{eqnarray} Y _{ ij } = \mu + S _{ i } + I _{ j } + S \times I _{ ij } + \varepsilon _{ ij }, \end{eqnarray}$$

where Y ij is the dependent variable; μ is the overall mean; S i is the fixed effect of silage type (maize v. grass); I j is the fixed effect of intake level (low v. high); S× I ij is the fixed effect of the interaction between S and I; and ε ij is the random residual error. For the dairy cow experiment, a mixed linear model that included a random intercept term for each animal was used. The mixed model was fitted using the lme procedure within the nlme package. Statistical analyses were carried out as a 4 × 4 Latin square, following the model:

$$\begin{eqnarray} Y _{ ijkl } = \mu + P _{ i } + C _{ j } + CHO_{ k } + CP_{ l } + CHO\times CP_{ kl } + \varepsilon _{ ijkl }, \end{eqnarray}$$

where Y ijkl is the dependent variable; μ is the overall mean; P i is the fixed effect of the experimental period i= 1–4; C j is the random effect of cow j= 1–5; CHO k is the fixed effect of dietary carbohydrate composition (starch v. fibre); CP l is the fixed effect of dietary CP level (12·0 v. 16·5 %); CHO × CPkl is the fixed effect of the interaction between CHO and CP; and εijkl is the random residual error. Mean values are reported as least-squares means with pooled standard error values due to missing observations.

For both experiments, when the interaction between main effects was significant the dietary treatment means were compared using Tukey's honest significant difference (HSD) multiple comparison. The significance of treatment effect was set at P< 0·05.

Regression analysis between observed (non-adjusted) data of Δ15N measured in different N pools and feed efficiency indices and other metabolic measures was performed using the lm procedure in R. The cut-off value suggesting that an observation is an extreme outlier was set at DFFITS (difference in fit, standardised) >2√(p/n), where p is the number of parameters estimated in the model and n is the total number of observations. Because no significant quadratic effect was found for any relationship (P>0·10), all results presented here were derived from linear regression analysis.

Results

Expt 1 (beef cattle)

Of the initial thirty-six animals, one did not finish the experiment due to health problems and another was removed from the final statistical analysis because it was considered an outlier according to the DFFITS analysis (n 34).

As shown in Table 1, diets based on maize silage had higher (P< 0·001) δ15N values and promoted higher (P< 0·001) δ15N of plasma proteins and lower (P< 0·001) N isotopic fractionation of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein= δ15Nanimal− δ15Ndiet) compared with diets based on grass silage. Diets supplied at a high intake level had lower (P< 0·001) δ15N values compared with diets supplied at a low intake level but only with diets based on maize silage (S× I; P< 0·001). There was no effect of I on δ15N of plasma proteins (P= 0·98) nor on Δ15Nplasma protein (P= 0·58), but differences across intake levels were different between maize and grass silage (S× I; P≤ 0·02). A difference of 0·82 ‰ was found between the diets with the lowest (maize silage at a low intake level) and highest (grass silage at a low intake level) Δ15Nplasma protein mean values.

Table 1 Nitrogen isotopic fractionation (δ15Nplasma protein−δ15Ndiet) in beef cattle fed the experimental diets (Mean values with their standard errors)

S, effect of silage type (maize v. grass); I, effect of intake level (low v. high).

a,b,cMean values within a row with unlike superscript letters were significantly different (P< 0·05).

Table 2 shows the coefficient of correlation between several feed efficiency indices and Δ15Nplasma protein obtained in growing beef cattle fed the experimental diets. All feed efficiency variables were positively correlated with each other. In our experimental conditions (classical and non-conventional growing beef diets at two feeding levels), almost two-thirds of variation in FCE was explained by a simple linear model based on ENU (FCE = 0·074( ± 0·013)+0·418( ± 0·056) × ENUG; r 2 0·63; P< 0·001), and this correlation was slightly improved when using metabolic efficiencies (EMEU, EMPU and EMPUg, 0·82 ≤ r≤ 0·85). Δ15Nplasma protein averaged 3·56 ‰, and showed a significant (P< 0·001) and negative correlation with FCE (r − 0·66), ENU (r − 0·72), EMPU (r − 0·78) and EMPUg (r − 0·82). In contrast, Δ15Nplasma protein showed a significant (P= 0·002) but weaker correlation with EMEU (r − 0·51). Figure 1 shows how Δ15Nplasma protein decreased as ENU and EMPUg increased (P< 0·001; 0·72 ≤ r≤ 0·82) in beef cattle: the more efficiently the beef cattle used dietary protein and MP, the lower the δ15N difference between plasma proteins and diet (Δ15Nplasma protein).

Table 2 Relationships between nitrogen isotopic fractionation of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein15Nplasma proteins−δ15Ndiet) and different feed efficiency indices in growing beef cattle (Mean values with their standard errors, n 34)

FCE, feed conversion efficiency; ENU, efficiency of N utilisation; EMEU, efficiency of metabolisable energy utilisation; EMPU, efficiency of metabolisable protein utilisation; EMPUg, efficiency of metabolisable protein utilisation for protein gain.

** P< 0·01, *** P< 0·001.

FCE = body-weight gain/DM intake.

ENU = body protein gain/crude protein intake.

§ EMEU = body net energy gain/metabolisable energy intake.

EMPU = body protein gain/metabolisable protein intake.

EMPUg = body protein gain/(metabolisable protein intake − metabolisable protein requirement for maintenance).

Fig. 1 Relationships between 15N enrichment over diet of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein) and (a) efficiency of N utilisation (ENU; body protein gain/crude protein intake) and (b) efficiency of metabolisable protein utilisation for protein gain (EMPUg; body protein gain/(metabolisable protein intake − metabolisable protein requirement for maintenance)) in growing beef cattle. Fitted equations are as follows: Δ15Nplasma protein= 5·21( ± 0·28) − 7·11( ± 1·19) × ENU (n 34; P< 0·001; r 2 0·52; residual SE (RSE) = 0·277) and Δ15Nplasma protein= 4·68( ± 0·14) − 1·82( ± 1·22) × EMPUg (n 34; P< 0·001; r 2 0·68; RSE = 0·224). ■, Diet based on maize silage at a low intake level; ●, diet based on maize silage at a high intake level; □, diet based on pre-wilted grass silage at a low intake level; ○, diet based on pre-wilted grass silage at a high intake level.

Expt 2 (dairy cows)

All available data from the original experiment were used for the regression analysis, except for ENU and liver urea synthesis where one data for each was declared an extreme outlier based on the DFFITS analysis (therefore, n 18 for ENU and n 15 for liver urea synthesis). The effect of period was not significant (P>0·05; data not shown) for any of the studied variables.

As shown in Table 3, starch diets had higher (P≤ 0·001) δ15N values and promoted higher δ15N of plasma and milk proteins (P≤ 0·006) and lower Δ15Nplasma protein (P= 0·008) and Δ15Nurine (P= 0·02) compared with fibre diets. A trend for starch diets to promote lower Δ15Nfaeces compared with fibre diets was also found (P= 0·06). CHO affected neither the δ15N values of faeces and urine nor the Δ15Nmilk protein values (P= 0·22). Low-CP diets (12·0 %CP) had higher (P< 0·001) δ15N values and promoted lower Δ15N of plasma and milk proteins (P≤ 0·003), faeces and urine (P= 0·08) compared with normal-CP diets (16·5 % CP).

Table 3 Nitrogen isotopic fractionation (δ15Nanimal−δ15Ndiet, ‰) from different animal pools in lactating dairy cows fed the experimental diets (Least-squares mean values with their pooled standard errors)

CHO, effect of dietary carbohydrate composition (starch v. fibre); CP, effect of crude protein (CP) level (12·0 % CP v. 16·5 % CP).

As shown in Table 4, Δ15Nplasma protein and Δ15Nmilk protein averaged 2·60 (sem 0·44) and 2·18 (sem 0·38) ‰, respectively, and showed no significant correlation (P≥ 0. 14) with FCE (ECM yield/kg DM intake), but a strong negative correlation with ENU (r − 0·91 and − 0·74, respectively; P< 0·001). Urine was depleted (Δ15Nurine= − 4·32 (sem 0·7) ‰) and faeces were enriched (Δ15Nfaeces= 1·86 (sem 0·69) ‰) in 15N compared with original diet contents, and the Δ15N of these two N excretion pools were also negatively correlated with ENU (P< 0·001, r − 0·76 and − 0·73, respectively) and not correlated with FCE (P≥ 0·12). Measures of Δ15N from different ruminant N pools were all significantly and positively correlated (0·48 ≤ r≤ 0·82), but the Δ15N of plasma proteins gave the best correlation with ENU (r − 0·91). The relationships between ENU and Δ15N of plasma and milk proteins are shown in Fig. 2, together with the relationships between ENU and Δ15N in the urine and faeces. Thus, the more efficiently the dairy cow transformed feed N into milk protein, the lower its Δ15N values in all of the ruminant N pools analysed (plasma and milk proteins, faeces and urine).

Table 4 Relationships between nitrogen isotopic fractionation of different nitrogen pools (Δ15N=δ15Nanimal−δ15Ndiet) and their relationships with feed efficiency in dairy cows (Mean values with their standard errors)

* P< 0·05, *** P< 0·001.

FCE = energy-corrected milk yield/feed DM intake.

ENU = milk N yield/feed N intake.

Fig. 2 15N enrichment or depletion over diet of (a) animal protein (plasma protein (Δ15Nplasma protein) and milk protein (Δ15Nmilk protein)) and (b) nitrogen excretion pools (urine (Δ15Nurine) and faeces (Δ15Nfaeces)) according to the efficiency of nitrogen utilisation (ENU; milk N/N intake) in lactating dairy cows. ■, 12·0 % CP-starch diet; ●, 12·0 % CP-fibre diet; □, 16·5 % CP-starch diet; ○, 16·5 % CP-fibre diet. Regression equations (n 18) are as follows: (1) Δ15Nplasma protein= 6·43( ± 0·45) − 12·0( ± 1·39) × ENU (r 2 0·82; RSE = 0·192; P< 0·001); (2) Δ15Nmilk protein= 4·92( ± 0·64) − 8·58( ± 2·0) × ENU (r 2 0·54; RSE = 0·275; P< 0·001); (3) Δ15Nfaeces= 7·11( ± 1·08) − 16·4( ± 3·37) × ENU (r 2 0·60; RSE = 0·465; P< 0·001); (4) Δ15Nurine= 0·76( ± 1·09) − 15·8( ± 3·39) × ENU (r 2 0·58; RSE = 0·468; P< 0·001).

In addition, as shown in Table 5, Δ15Nplasma protein showed a significant and positive correlation with liver urea synthesis (r 0·77, P< 0·001) and splanchnic amino acid metabolism (0·79 ≤ r≤ 0·84; P< 0·001, on its correlation with the amino acid flux towards protein synthesis and oxidation measured as the irreversible loss rate of leucine and phenylalanine across the PDV and liver, respectively). In contrast, no significant relationship was found between Δ15Nplasma protein and rumen NH3-N absorption (net portal flux of NH3-N; r 0·42; P= 0·07) or urea-N recycling (net portal flux of urea-N; r 0·35; P= 0·14). Figure 3 shows how Δ15Nplasma protein increased (P< 0·001) as liver urea synthesis and splanchnic metabolic utilisation of amino acids increased. Despite good correlations between Δ15N and hepatic ureagenesis, no correlation (0·08 ≤ r≤ 0·12; P≥ 0·619) was found, as determined by the regression of Δ15N against plasma activities of the main transaminases (alanine and aspartate transaminases).

Table 5 Relationships between the nitrogen isotopic fractionation of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein) and nitrogen fluxes in lactating dairy cows*

* n 19 except for ENU (n 18), liver urea-N synthesis (n 15) and Phe metabolised by the liver (n 16).

Net portal flux of NH3-N.

Net portal flux of urea-N.

§ Net hepatic flux of urea-N.

Irreversible loss rate of leucine across the portal-drained viscera.

Irreversible loss rate of phenylalanine across the liver.

Fig. 3 Relationships between 15N enrichment over diet of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein) and (a) liver urea synthesis, (b) leucine metabolised by the portal-drained viscera (Leu ILR-PDV) and (c) phenylalanine metabolised by the liver (Phe ILR-Liver). ■, 12·0 % CP-starch diet; ●, 12·0 % CP-fibre diet; □, 16·5 % CP-starch diet; ○, 16·5 % CP-fibre diet. Fitted equations are as follows: Δ15Nplasma protein= 1·39( ± 0·29)+0·0081 ( ± 0·0019) × liver urea synthesis (n 15; r 2 0·59; P< 0·001); Δ15Nplasma protein= 1·49( ± 0·19)+0·076( ± 0·012) × Leu ILR-PDV (n 19; r 2 0·71; P< 0·001); Δ15Nplasma protein= 0·86( ± 0·37)+0·160( ± 0·034) × Phe ILR-Liver (n 16; r 2 0·63; P< 0·001).

Discussion

Δ15N of animal proteins and efficiency of nitrogen utilisation

As expected from other ruminant( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 , Reference Steele and Daniel 35 , Reference Sutoh, Koyama and Yoneyama 36 ) and non-ruminant( Reference Gaye-Siessegger, Focken and Abel 14 , Reference Poupin, Bos and Mariotti 15 ) studies, animal proteins were naturally 15N-enriched relative to diet, with mean trophic shift values in line with previous observations in dairy cows (2·37 ‰( Reference Sutoh, Koyama and Yoneyama 36 ) and 3·19 ‰( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 )) and growing cattle (3·58( Reference Wheadon, McGee and Edwards 3 ) and 3·8( Reference Koyama, Madoka and Tadakatu 37 )). The results found herein for beef cattle and confirmed for dairy cows( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 ) demonstrated that the efficiency with which feed N is assimilated into animal proteins is negatively correlated with the N isotopic fractionation (i.e. the δ15N difference) between animal proteins and animal diet. In fact, diets in the present study were ranked in terms of Δ15N similarly to the reported ENU in the beef cattle( Reference Sepchat, Ortigues-Marty and Mialon 24 ) and dairy cow( Reference Cantalapiedra-Hijar, Lemosquet and Rodriguez-Lopez 25 ) experiments. This explains, for instance, why an S× I interaction effect was found in beef cattle for Δ15Nplasma protein or why the dietary CP level significantly affected Δ15Nplasma protein and Δ15Nmilk protein in dairy cows. Thus, the more efficiently the animals utilise dietary N, the closer the δ15N values between animal proteins and diet (i.e. the lower the trophic shift). In this sense, higher Δ15N values have been reported as ruminants were fed high- v. low-N diets( Reference Sponheimer, Robinson and Ayliffe 11 , Reference Schwertl, Auerswald and Schäufele 38 ) in accordance with the expected lower ENU as N intake increases in cattle( Reference Huhtanen and Hristov 39 ). Likewise, Δ15N has been positively correlated with N intake in non-ruminant species( Reference Adams and Sterner 21 ) and negatively to efficiency of protein accretion in fish( Reference Gaye-Siessegger, Focken and Abel 14 ). This may suggest that variations in Δ15N could be primarily driven by the efficiency with which dietary N is assimilated into animal proteins. Known factors affecting Δ15N, such as dietary protein quality and quantity( Reference Robbins, Felicetti and Sponheimer 10 , Reference Sponheimer, Robinson and Ayliffe 11 , Reference Poupin, Bos and Mariotti 15 ), habitat and climate( Reference Ambrose 40 ), physiological state or pathological conditions( Reference Fuller, Fullet and Sage 41 , Reference Barboza and Parker 42 ), could, therefore, all have an impact on Δ15N via changes in the efficiency of N assimilation into animal proteins through a shift in the relative partitioning of dietary N into anabolic v. catabolic pathways.

The period of time elapsed between a diet shift, and the sampling of animal proteins is an important issue when analysing Δ15N data. Indeed, isotopic data should be interpreted with caution when this period of time is not long enough to allow animal tissues to incorporate the isotopic composition of the new diet through their specific protein turnover rates( Reference Poupin, Bos and Mariotti 15 ). This might be the case in cross-over design experiments with short experimental periods similar to the dairy cow experiment conducted in the present study (with four successive diet-shift periods lasting 27 d each) as well as other ruminant studies reported in the literature( Reference Cheng, Kim and Merry 19 , Reference Cheng, Nicol and Dewhurst 20 ). In such cases, there could be a potential bias if the Δ15N measurements at the end of each successive diet shift are significantly influenced by the initial isotopic values (i.e. memory effect). However, assuming a fractional synthesis rate of plasma proteins in ruminants ranging from 6·5( Reference Raggio, Lobley and Berthiaume 43 ) to 11·5 %/d( Reference Connell, Calder and Anderson 44 ), the calculated proportion of isotopic equilibrium reached after 27 d from the last diet shift would range from 83 to 96 % for our non-growing dairy cows according to the classical single-compartment first-order kinetic model used to describe isotopic trajectories( Reference Martínez del Rio, Wolf and Carleton 45 ). These estimates are in line with predictions of a recently developed multi-compartmental model( Reference Poupin, Mariotti and Huneau 46 ): Δ15N values of plasma proteins, faeces and urine should have reached 80–90 % of their final isotopic equilibrium values at 27 d post-diet shift. This non-steady state condition has probably not biased the present results as only a minor fraction of the sampled pools (less than 20 % in all cases) did not actually reflect metabolic adaptations to the diet being tested, but adaptations to the previous diet due to a memory effect. In contrast, this limitation would not apply for the beef cattle experiment, since the period of time used between the diet shift and blood sampling (230 d) was long enough to ensure that plasma proteins has reached isotopic equilibrium( Reference Bahar, Harrison and Moloney 47 ). Future research on isotopic fractionation of 15N in ruminants should respect a minimum of 45 d post-diet shift before blood sampling in order to ensure isotopic equilibrium (time frame necessary to reach 95 % of isotopic equilibrium assuming a value of 6·5 %/d for plasma protein turnover).

Mechanisms involved in 15N fractionation in ruminants

Ruminants, unlike monogastric species, can show substantial N isotopic fractionation during digestion( Reference Wattiaux and Reed 17 , 34 , Reference Steele and Daniel 35 ), and this has been cited as one of the main reasons why Δ15N has not always correlated with efficiency of N assimilation in ruminant experiments( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 , Reference Cheng, Kim and Merry 19 , Reference Cheng, Nicol and Dewhurst 20 ). The fact that Δ15Nplasma protein showed no correlation with rumen NH3-N absorption or urea-N recycling was unexpected( Reference Wattiaux and Reed 17 , Reference Gannes, Martinez del Rio and Koch 23 ), and could indicate that under our experimental conditions, most of the Δ15N variability originated from animal metabolism rather than rumen N efficiency (microbial protein synthesis/rumen available N( Reference Barboza and Parker 42 )) or urea-N recycling.

It has been speculated( 34 ) and demonstrated in vitro ( Reference Wattiaux and Reed 17 ) that rumen bacteria preferentially use 14N- over 15N-NH3 to synthesise their own proteins, leading to higher absorption of 15N-enriched NH3 (and thus urea-N excreted in the urine) and 15N-depleted microbial protein (and thus absorbed amino acids and eventually body proteins) as NH3 taken up by rumen bacteria (i.e. rumen N efficiency) increases. Moreover, as N isotopic fractionation only takes place during the incorporation of NH3-N into bacterial proteins( Reference Wattiaux and Reed 17 ), the use of preformed amino acids and peptides rather than NH3 for microbial protein synthesis would further decrease the isotopic fractionation. Only about 20 % of bacterial protein is derived from non-NH3 sources at typical rumen conditions( Reference Bach, Calsamiglia and Stern 48 ); however, an increase in bacterial growth has been associated with the addition of amino acids and peptides in in vitro cultures through a direct incorporation of preformed amino acids into microbial protein( Reference Bach, Calsamiglia and Stern 48 ). Therefore, rumen N utilisation would affect N isotopic fractionation in the same way as metabolic N utilisation( Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 ), with both contributing to decrease Δ15N as their efficiencies increase. Given that rumen N metabolism has been identified as the most important factor contributing to ENU in ruminants( Reference Tamminga 49 )and that N isotopic fractionation in animals is thought to occur before the urea synthesis cycle( Reference Minagawa and Wada 8 ), the well-demonstrated N isotopic fractionation by rumen bacteria could by itself explain the good correlation between Δ15N and ENU found here and in other( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 ) ruminant experiments. However, the many metabolic routes by which NH3-N could potentially be isotopically discriminated (i.e. NH3 incorporated into bacterial proteins and urea-N recycling, and NH3 absorption through the rumen wall( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 )) might complicate this simple reasoning. This could explain why we did not find any correlations between Δ15N and rumen NH3-N absorption or why under certain feeding conditions Δ15N did not negatively correlate with ENU( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 , Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 ). Interestingly, Sutoh et al. ( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 ) found significant δ15N differences in animal proteins but not in rumen protein bacteria (the main amino acid source in most ruminant feeding conditions( Reference Schniffen and Robinson 50 )) and similar δ15N values for plasma urea but not in rumen NH3 (the main N donor to urea synthesis in ruminants( Reference Parker, Lomax and Seal 51 )) when sheep were fed iso-N diets supplemented or not with sucrose. They concluded that metabolic pathways involved in urea synthesis could have explained the findings. In this regard, Cabrita et al. ( Reference Cabrita, Fonseca and Dewhurst 52 ) argued that the weaker, although significant, relationship (r 2 0·29) between ENU and Δ15N of milk protein (casein) compared with other studies( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 ) could have been ascribed to the relatively little variations in hepatic deamination and transamination among the experimental diets, with variations in rumen efficiency having the predominant effect on ENU. These results suggest that although rumen efficiency seems to be involved in the N isotopic fractionation, variations in animal N metabolism are probably the most important determinants of Δ15N.

15N trophic shift (i.e. positive Δ15N) is thought to originate in part from whole-body amino acid metabolism( Reference Gaebler, Vitti and Vukmirovich 6 , Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 ) and ureagenesis( Reference Deniro and Epstein 7 , Reference Sutoh, Koyama and Yoneyama 36 ). The rationale is that transamination and deamination enzymes are likely to preferentially convert amino groups containing 14N over 15N( Reference Macko, Estep and Engel 53 , Reference Schimerlik, Rife and Cleland 54 ), resulting in the excretion of the isotopically lighter 14N and retention of the isotopically heavier 15N( Reference Gannes, Martinez del Rio and Koch 23 ). Moreover, it has been hypothesised that the extent of anabolic (protein synthesis) and catabolic (urea synthesis) use of absorbed amino acids in the liver may modulate the magnitude of Δ15N( Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 ). Indeed, in line with a limited dataset obtained in different species( Reference Vanderklift and Ponsard 9 , Reference Robbins, Felicetti and Sponheimer 10 , Reference Gaye-Siessegger, Focken and Abel 14 , Reference Poupin, Bos and Mariotti 15 ), a negative relationship between Δ15N and efficiency of protein assimilation is expected, since the δ15N values of body proteins would remain close to those in the diet as urea production decreases with increasing proportion of dietary amino acids incorporated into body protein. In this sense, liver urea synthesis was positively correlated with Δ15N in the present study, supporting the concept of 15N fractionation during ureagenesis. However, we did not find a relationship between plasma transaminase concentrations and Δ15N here despite the fact that plasma aspartate aminotransferase concentration has been shown to correlate negatively with feed efficiency in some ruminant studies( Reference Richardson, Herd and Archer 55 ).

Moreover, splanchnic amino acid metabolism (measured as the irreversible loss rate of leucine and phenylalanine across the PDV and liver, respectively, and representing their anabolic (protein synthesis) and catabolic (oxidation) utilisation) showed a significant and positive relationship with Δ15N. Given that splanchnic tissues are considered to contribute between 30 and 50 % of total protein flux in cattle( Reference Lapierre, Bernier and Dubreuil 56 ) and between 20 and 40 % of whole-body amino acid oxidation( Reference Lobley 57 ), they are expected to exert a major influence on ENU( Reference Lobley 57 ). The question is whether the relationship between splanchnic amino acid metabolism and 15N fractionation is contingent on splanchnic amino acid oxidation rather than splanchnic protein synthesis. In principle, 15N fractionation is less likely to occur during protein synthesis because the amino group is not involved in amino acid activation and binding to transfer RNA( Reference Schoeller 58 ), but more research is needed to validate this hypothesis.

Δ15N in nitrogen excretion pools compared with animal proteins

Consistent with other studies( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 , Reference Steele and Daniel 35 , Reference Sutoh, Koyama and Yoneyama 36 ), ruminant faeces and urine were naturally 15N-enriched and 15N-depleted in relation to the diet. It should be noted that the Δ15N of the urine (δ15Nurine− δ15Ndiet) and faeces (δ15Nfaeces− δ15Ndiet) also showed significant negative correlations with ENU in the dairy cow experiment. Indeed, Δ15N of the urine was significantly and positively correlated with Δ15N of plasma proteins (r 0·76, P< 0·001), with a fairly constant 15N enrichment of plasma proteins relative to the urine for all animals (6·92 (sem 0·46)), in line with other ruminant( Reference Cheng, Sheahan and Gibbs 18 ) and non-ruminant( Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 , Reference Poupin, Bos and Mariotti 15 ) studies. The N end products resulting from liver amino acid metabolism have previously been reported to exhibit ‘isotope ratio disproportionation( Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 )’, namely a 15N enrichment of the plasma protein and a 15N depletion of the urea (and thus urine) produced in the liver compared with their common precursor. So, it seems that the proportional enrichment of plasma proteins as ENU decreases would affect to the same extent the 15N depletion of urine as predicted in rats from the equations proposed by Sick et al. ( Reference Sick, Roos and Saggau 13 ). In contrast, no relationship between δ15N in animal proteins and urine was found in sheep( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 ), which could suggest that the 2-week diet adaptation period used in that study was not long enough to reach steady-state conditions.

The Δ15N of the faeces was significantly and positively correlated with Δ15N of plasma and milk proteins, in agreement with others( Reference Sutoh, Obara and Yoneyamat 16 ), and thus was also showed significantly and negatively correlated with ENU. Metabolic faecal N (non-reabsorbed endogenous protein) contributes significantly to total faecal N excretion in ruminants (from 20 to 50 %( Reference Ouellet, Demers and Zuur 59 , 60 )), so high contamination of the undigested feed N with endogenously enriched 15N proteins is thus expected. Based on the fact that contribution of endogenous proteins (animal) to total N excreted in the faeces is related to DM intake( Reference Cantalapiedra-Hijar, Lemosquet and Rodriguez-Lopez 25 , Reference Schniffen and Robinson 50 ), and that we found no differences in DM intake among our dietary treatments( Reference Robelin and Geay 27 ), a proportional 15N enrichment of the faeces would parallel the observed increase in animal proteins with decreasing ENU.

Efficiency of nitrogen utilisation: sources of variation and isotopic biomarkers

The results from the beef cattle experiment showed that the EMPUg explained almost three-quarters of FCE variability across the four feeding conditions tested. In contrast to the efficiency of metabolisable energy use for growth (kg), EMPUg evolve similarly to FCE across the lifetime of the animal, i.e. they both decrease as lipid content of BW gain increases with age( Reference Geay, Micol and Robelin 61 ). Thus, evidence suggests that EMPUg contributes significantly to overall feed efficiency and thus to performance, although the factors involved in its high variability (EMPUg ranged from 0·38 to 0·95 in our conditions) are not completely understood( Reference Bequette, Backwell and Crompton 62 ). In ruminants, the efficiency with which MP is converted to net protein for gain or milk is variable, and has been demonstrated to be significantly affected by (1) level of protein( Reference Raggio, Pacheco and Berthiaume 63 ) and energy( Reference Rius, McGilliard and Umberger 64 ) supplies, (2) absorbed amino acid profile( Reference Haque, Rulquin and Andrade 65 ), (3) contribution of lipids to BW gain( Reference Geay, Micol and Robelin 61 ), (4) milk production level( Reference Van Duinkerken, Blok and Bannink 66 ), among other factors. In addition, other non-identified features related to the animals could contribute to the high between-animal variability usually found in EMPUg (EMPUg ranged from 0·37 to 0·60 in animals fed the same diet in the beef cattle experiment). The challenge today is to integrate all of this variability into ration-balancing models that avoid the use of fixed metabolic efficiency coefficients that lead to erroneous predictions. For instance, as cited by Dijkstra et al. ( Reference Dijkstra, Reynolds and Kebreab 67 ), a decrease in EMPUg for milk protein yield from 0·85 (maximum theoretical efficiency( 68 )) to 0·64 (conversion efficiency factor assumed by most feeding systems) or even 0·38 (maximum within-experiment efficiency (marginal) from PDI system data( Reference Cant, Dijkstra, Forbes and France 69 )) results in maximal ENU for a standard cow of 0·43, 0·37 and 0·26, respectively. New feeding systems should be able to integrate this high variability in EMPUg to better predict ruminant feed requirements and performances. The present results showed that Δ15N could be used as a biomarker- of EMPUg in growing young bulls fed different diets, but more studies are needed to evaluate its potential use in real-world farming systems.

Conclusions

The results found herein showed that the efficiency with which feed N is assimilated into animal proteins is a major factor driving the variations in 15N fractionation between different ruminant N pools (plasma and milk proteins, faecal and urinary N) and diet, and suggests that splanchnic amino acid metabolism could play a key role in the N isotopic fractionation observed in ruminants. 15N fractionation between animal and diet could potentially be used in ruminant feeding practice to encompass the variability in the conversion of MP into animal proteins; however, more controlled studies are needed to address and validate this point.

Acknowledgements

The authors thank C. Chantelauze and N. Khodorova for their technical assistance and S. Bonny for her help with the English translation.

G. C.-H. received financial support from the INRA's Phase department (CI-Phase ‘Emergence’ 2013).

The authors' responsibilities are as follows: G. C.-H., I. O.-M., J. A. and B. S. were involved in the design of the experiments, formulation of the research questions, and preparation of the manuscript; H. F. and J. F. H. were involved in the isotopic analysis and data analysis, as well as in the preparation of the manuscript; G. C.-H. also conducted additional analysis and prepared the first draft of the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript

There are no conflicts of interest.

References

1 FAO (2011) World Livestock 2011 – Livestock in Food Security. Rome: FAO.Google Scholar
2 Calsamiglia, S, Ferret, A, Reynolds, CK, et al. (2010) Strategies for optimizing nitrogen use by ruminants. Animal 4, 11841196.Google Scholar
3 Wheadon, NM, McGee, M & Edwards, GR (2014) Plasma nitrogen isotopic fractionation and feed efficiency in growing beef heifers. Br J Nutr 111, 17051711.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
4 Phuong, HN, Friggens, NC, de Boer, IJM, et al. (2013) Factors affecting energy and nitrogen efficiency of dairy cows: a meta-analysis. J Dairy Sci 96, 72457259.Google Scholar
5 Castillo, AR, Kebreab, E, Beever, DE, et al. (2001) The effect of protein supplementation on nitrogen utilization in lactating dairy cows fed grass silage diets. J Anim Sci 79, 247253.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
6 Gaebler, OH, Vitti, TG & Vukmirovich, R (1966) Isotope effects in metabolism of 14N and 15N from unlabeled dietary proteins. Can J Biochem 44, 12491257.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
7 Deniro, M & Epstein, S (1981) Influence of diet on the distribution of nitrogen isotopes in animals. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 45, 341351.Google Scholar
8 Minagawa, M & Wada, E (1986) Nitrogen isotope ratios of red tide organisms in the east China sea: a characterization of biological nitrogen fixation. Marine Chem 19, 245259.Google Scholar
9 Vanderklift, MA & Ponsard, S (2003) Sources of variation in consumer-diet δ15N enrichment: a meta-analysis. Oecologia 136, 169182.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
10 Robbins, CT, Felicetti, LA & Sponheimer, M (2005) The effect of dietary protein quality on nitrogen isotope discrimination in mammals and birds. Oecologia 144, 534540.Google Scholar
11 Sponheimer, M, Robinson, T, Ayliffe, L, et al. (2003) Nitrogen isotopes in mammalian herbivores: hair? δ15N values from a controlled feeding study. Int J Osteoarchaeol 13, 8087.Google Scholar
12 Fuller, BT, Fuller, JL, Sage, NE, et al. (2004) Nitrogen balance and δ15N: why you're not what you eat during pregnancy. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom 18, 28892896.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13 Sick, H, Roos, N, Saggau, E, et al. (1997) Amino acid utilization and isotope discrimination of amino nitrogen in nitrogen metabolism of rat liver in vivo . Z Ernährungswiss 36, 340346.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
14 Gaye-Siessegger, J, Focken, U, Abel, H, et al. (2004) Individual protein balance strongly influences δ15N and δ13C values in Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus . Naturwissenschaften 91, 9093.Google Scholar
15 Poupin, N, Bos, C, Mariotti, F, et al. (2011) The nature of the dietary protein impacts the tissue-to-diet 15N discrimination factors in laboratory rats. PLoS ONE 6, e28046.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
16 Sutoh, M, Obara, Y & Yoneyamat, T (1992) The effects of feeding regimen and dietary sucrose supplementation on natural abundance of 15N in some components of ruminal fluid and plasma of sheep. J Anim Sci 71, 226231.Google Scholar
17 Wattiaux, MA & Reed, JD (1995) Fractionation of nitrogen isotopes by mixed ruminal bacterial. J Anim Sci 73, 257266.Google Scholar
18 Cheng, L, Sheahan, AJ, Gibbs, SJ, et al. (2013) Technical note: nitrogen isotopic fractionation can be used to predict nitrogen-use efficiency in dairy cows fed temperate pasture. J Anim Sci 91, 57855788.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
19 Cheng, L, Kim, EJ, Merry, RJ, et al. (2011) Nitrogen partitioning and isotopic fractionation in dairy cows consuming diets based on a range of contrasting forages. J Dairy Sci 94, 20312041.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20 Cheng, L, Nicol, AM, Dewhurst, RJ, et al. (2013) The effects of dietary nitrogen to water-soluble carbohydrate ratio on isotopic fractionation and partitioning of nitrogen in non-lactating sheep. Animal 7, 12741279.Google Scholar
21 Adams, TS & Sterner, RW (2000) The effect of dietary nitrogen content on trophic level 15N enrichment. Limnol Oceanogr 45, 601607.Google Scholar
22 Martinez del Rio, C & Carleton, SA (2012) How fast and how faithful: the dynamics of isotopic incorporation into animal tissues. J Mammal 93, 353359.Google Scholar
23 Gannes, LZ, Martinez del Rio, C & Koch, P (1998) Natural abundance variations in stable isotopes and their potential uses in animal physiological ecology. Comp Biochem Physiol 119, 725737.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
24 Sepchat, B, Ortigues-Marty, I, Mialon, MM, et al. (2013) Croissance et nature des dépôts de jeunes bovins charolais recevant en engraissement des rations à base d'enrubannage ou d'ensilage de maïs (Growth and nature of deposits for Charolais bulls receiving diets based on wrapped hay silage or corn silage during fattening). Renc Rech Ruminants 20, 169172.Google Scholar
25 Cantalapiedra-Hijar, G, Lemosquet, S, Rodriguez-Lopez, JM, et al. (2014) Diets rich in starch increase the posthepatic availability of amino acids in dairy cows fed diets at low and normal protein levels. J Dairy Sci 97, 51515166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
26 Institut national de la recherche agronomique (2007) Alimentation des bovins, ovins et caprins – Besoin des animaux – Valeurs des aliments (Feeding of cattle, sheep and goats – Animal requirements – Feed values). In Tables INRA 2007. Versailles: Editions Quae.Google Scholar
27 Robelin, J & Geay, Y (1975) Estimation de la composition de la carcasse des taurillons a partir de la composition de la 6eme cote (Estimation of carcass composition of young bulls from the composition of the 6th rib). In Bulletin Technique CRZV Theix-INRA, vol. 22, pp. 4144. Vannes: Centre de Recherches Zootechniques et Veterinaires de Theix.Google Scholar
28 Lapierre, H, Berthiaume, R, Raggio, G, et al. (2005) The route of absorbed nitrogen into milk protein. Anim Sci 80, 1122.Google Scholar
29 Savary-Auzeloux, I, Kraft, G, Bequette, BJ, et al. (2010) Dietary nitrogen-to-energy ratio alters amino acid partition in the whole body and among the splanchnic tissues of growing rams. J Anim Sci 88, 21222131.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
30 Robelin, J (1981) Cellularity of bovine adipose tissues: developmental changes from 15 to 65 percent mature weight. J Lipid Res 22, 452457.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
31 Association of Official Analytical Chemists (2005) Official Methods of Analysis, 18th ed. Arlington, VA: AOAC.Google Scholar
32 Robelin, J & Daenicke, R (1980) Variations in net requirements for cattle growth with liveweight, liveweight gain, breed and sex. Ann Zootech 29, 99118.Google Scholar
33 Garcia, F & Agabriel, J (2008) CompoCow: a predictive model to estimate variations in body composition and the energy requirements of cull cows during fattening. J Agric Sci 146, 251265.Google Scholar
34 R Development Core Team (2009) R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing. http://www.R-project.org.Google Scholar
35 Steele, KW & Daniel, RM (2009) Fractionation of nitrogen isotopes by animals: a further complication to the use of variations in the natural abundance of 15N for tracer studies. J Agric Sci 90, 79.Google Scholar
36 Sutoh, M, Koyama, T & Yoneyama, T (1987) Variations of natural 15N abundances in the tissues and digesta of domestic animals. Radioisotopes 36, 7477.Google Scholar
37 Koyama, T, Madoka, S & Tadakatu, Y (1985) Fractionation of nitrogen isotopes by domestic animals. Jpn J Zootechnical Sci 56, 361363.Google Scholar
38 Schwertl, M, Auerswald, K, Schäufele, R, et al. (2005) Carbon and nitrogen stable isotope composition of cattle hair: ecological fingerprints of production systems? Agric Ecosyst Environ 109, 153165.Google Scholar
39 Huhtanen, P & Hristov, N (2009) A meta-analysis of the effects of dietary protein concentration and degradability on milk protein yield and milk N efficiency in dairy cows. J Dairy Sci 92, 32223232.Google Scholar
40 Ambrose, SH (1991) Effects of diet, climate and physiology on nitrogen isotope abundances in terrestrial foodwebs. J Archaeol Sci 18, 293317.Google Scholar
41 Fuller, BT, Fullet, JL, Sage, NE, et al. (2004) Nitrogen balance and δ15N: why you're not what you eat during pregnancy. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom 18, 28892896.Google Scholar
42 Barboza, PS & Parker, KL (2006) Body protein stores and isotopic indicators of N balance in female reindeer (Rangifer tarandus) during winter. Physiol Biochem Zool 79, 628644.Google Scholar
43 Raggio, G, Lobley, GE, Berthiaume, R, et al. (2007) Effect of protein supply on hepatic synthesis of plasma and constitutive proteins in lactating dairy cows. J Dairy Sci 90, 352359.Google Scholar
44 Connell, A, Calder, AG, Anderson, SE, et al. (1997) Hepatic protein synthesis in the sheep: effect of intake as by use of stable-isotope-labelled glycine, leucine and phenylalanine. Br J Nutr 77, 255271.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
45 Martínez del Rio, C, Wolf, N, Carleton, SA, et al. (2009) Isotopic ecology ten years after a call for more laboratory experiments. Biol Rev 84, 91111.Google Scholar
46 Poupin, N, Mariotti, F, Huneau, JF, et al. (2014) Natural isotopic signatures of variations in body nitrogen fluxes: a compartmental model analysis. PLoS Computat Biol 10, e1003865.Google Scholar
47 Bahar, B, Harrison, SM, Moloney, AP, et al. (2014) Isotopic turnover of carbon and nitrogen in bovine blood fractions and inner organs. Rapid Commun Mass Spectrom 28, 10111018.Google Scholar
48 Bach, A, Calsamiglia, S & Stern, MD (2005) Nitrogen metabolism in the rumen. J Dairy Sci 88, E9E21.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
49 Tamminga, S (1992) Nutrition management of dairy cows as a contribution to pollution control. J Dairy Sci 75, 345357.Google Scholar
50 Schniffen, CJ & Robinson, PH (1987) Microbial growth and flow as influenced by dietary manipulation. J Dairy Sci 70, 425441.Google Scholar
51 Parker, DS, Lomax, MA, Seal, CJ, et al. (1995) Metabolic implications of ammonia production in the ruminant. Proc Nutr Soc 54, 549563.Google Scholar
52 Cabrita, ARJ, Fonseca, AJM & Dewhurst, RJ (2014) Relationship between the efficiency of utilization of feed nitrogen and 15N enrichment in casein from lactating dairy cows. J Dairy Sci 97, 72257229.Google Scholar
53 Macko, SA, Estep, MLF, Engel, MH, et al. (1986) Kinetic fractionation of stable nitrogen isotopes during amino acid transamination. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 50, 21432146.Google Scholar
54 Schimerlik, M, Rife, JE & Cleland, WW (1975) Equilibrium perturbation by isotope substitution. Biochemistry 14, 53475354.Google Scholar
55 Richardson, EC, Herd, RM, Archer, JA, et al. (2014) Metabolic differences in Angus steers divergently selected for residual feed intake. Aust J Exp Agric 44, 441452.Google Scholar
56 Lapierre, H, Bernier, JF, Dubreuil, P, et al. (1999) The effect of intake on protein metabolism across splanchnic tissues in growing beef steers. Br J Nutr 81, 457466.Google Scholar
57 Lobley, GE (2003) Protein turnover – what does it mean for animal production? Can J Anim Sci 83, 327340.Google Scholar
58 Schoeller, DA (1999) Isotope fractionation: why aren't we what we eat? J Archaeol Sci 26, 667673.Google Scholar
59 Ouellet, DR, Demers, M, Zuur, , et al. (2002) Effect of dietary fiber on endogenous nitrogen flows in lactating dairy cows. J Dairy Sci 85, 30133025.Google Scholar
60 NRC (2001) Nutrient Requirements of Dairy Cattle, 7th rev. ed. Washington, DC: National Academy Press.Google Scholar
61 Geay, Y, Micol, D, Robelin, J, et al. (1987) Recommandations alimentaires pour les bovins en croissance et à l'engrais (Feed requirements for growing and fattening cattle). In Bulletin Technique CRZV Theix-INRA, vol. 70, pp. 173183. Vannes: C.R.Z.V. Theix, INRA.Google Scholar
62 Bequette, BJ, Backwell, FR & Crompton, LA (1998) Current concepts of amino acid and protein metabolism in the mammary gland of the lactating ruminant. J Dairy Sci 81, 25402559.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
63 Raggio, G, Pacheco, D, Berthiaume, , et al. (2004) Effect of level of metabolisable protein on splanchnic flux of amino acids in lactating dairy cows. J Dairy Sci 87, 34613472.Google Scholar
64 Rius, AG, McGilliard, ML, Umberger, CA, et al. (2010) Interactions of energy and predicted metabolisable protein in determining nitrogen efficiency in the lactating dairy cow. J Dairy Sci 93, 20342043.Google Scholar
65 Haque, MN, Rulquin, H, Andrade, A, et al. (2012) Milk protein synthesis in response to the provision of an ideal amino acid profile at 2 levels of metabolisable protein supply in dairy cows. J Dairy Sci 95, 58765887.Google Scholar
66 Van Duinkerken, G, Blok, MC, Bannink, A, et al. (2010) Update of the Dutch protein evaluation system for ruminants: the DVE/OEB2010 system. J Agric Sci 149, 351367.Google Scholar
67 Dijkstra, J, Reynolds, CK, Kebreab, E, et al. (2013) Challenges in ruminant nutrition: towards minimal nitrogen losses in cattle. In Energy and Protein Metabolism and Nutrition in Sustainable Animal Production, pp. 4758. Wageningen: Wageningen Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
68 AFRC (1992) Technical committee on responses to nutrients, report 9. Nutritive requirements of ruminants animals: protein. Nutr Abstr Rev (Series B) 62, 787835.Google Scholar
69 Cant, JP (2005) Integration of data in feed evaluation systems. In Quantitative Aspects of Ruminant Digestion and Metabolism, 2nd ed., pp. 707726 [Dijkstra, J, Forbes, JM and France, J, editors]. Wallingford: CABI Publishing.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Nitrogen isotopic fractionation (δ15Nplasma protein−δ15Ndiet) in beef cattle fed the experimental diets (Mean values with their standard errors)

Figure 1

Table 2 Relationships between nitrogen isotopic fractionation of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein15Nplasma proteins−δ15Ndiet) and different feed efficiency indices in growing beef cattle (Mean values with their standard errors, n 34)

Figure 2

Fig. 1 Relationships between 15N enrichment over diet of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein) and (a) efficiency of N utilisation (ENU; body protein gain/crude protein intake) and (b) efficiency of metabolisable protein utilisation for protein gain (EMPUg; body protein gain/(metabolisable protein intake − metabolisable protein requirement for maintenance)) in growing beef cattle. Fitted equations are as follows: Δ15Nplasma protein= 5·21( ± 0·28) − 7·11( ± 1·19) × ENU (n 34; P< 0·001; r2 0·52; residual SE (RSE) = 0·277) and Δ15Nplasma protein= 4·68( ± 0·14) − 1·82( ± 1·22) × EMPUg (n 34; P< 0·001; r2 0·68; RSE = 0·224). ■, Diet based on maize silage at a low intake level; ●, diet based on maize silage at a high intake level; □, diet based on pre-wilted grass silage at a low intake level; ○, diet based on pre-wilted grass silage at a high intake level.

Figure 3

Table 3 Nitrogen isotopic fractionation (δ15Nanimal−δ15Ndiet, ‰) from different animal pools in lactating dairy cows fed the experimental diets (Least-squares mean values with their pooled standard errors)

Figure 4

Table 4 Relationships between nitrogen isotopic fractionation of different nitrogen pools (Δ15N=δ15Nanimal−δ15Ndiet) and their relationships with feed efficiency in dairy cows (Mean values with their standard errors)

Figure 5

Fig. 2 15N enrichment or depletion over diet of (a) animal protein (plasma protein (Δ15Nplasma protein) and milk protein (Δ15Nmilk protein)) and (b) nitrogen excretion pools (urine (Δ15Nurine) and faeces (Δ15Nfaeces)) according to the efficiency of nitrogen utilisation (ENU; milk N/N intake) in lactating dairy cows. ■, 12·0 % CP-starch diet; ●, 12·0 % CP-fibre diet; □, 16·5 % CP-starch diet; ○, 16·5 % CP-fibre diet. Regression equations (n 18) are as follows: (1) Δ15Nplasma protein= 6·43( ± 0·45) − 12·0( ± 1·39) × ENU (r2 0·82; RSE = 0·192; P< 0·001); (2) Δ15Nmilk protein= 4·92( ± 0·64) − 8·58( ± 2·0) × ENU (r2 0·54; RSE = 0·275; P< 0·001); (3) Δ15Nfaeces= 7·11( ± 1·08) − 16·4( ± 3·37) × ENU (r2 0·60; RSE = 0·465; P< 0·001); (4) Δ15Nurine= 0·76( ± 1·09) − 15·8( ± 3·39) × ENU (r2 0·58; RSE = 0·468; P< 0·001).

Figure 6

Table 5 Relationships between the nitrogen isotopic fractionation of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein) and nitrogen fluxes in lactating dairy cows*

Figure 7

Fig. 3 Relationships between 15N enrichment over diet of plasma proteins (Δ15Nplasma protein) and (a) liver urea synthesis, (b) leucine metabolised by the portal-drained viscera (Leu ILR-PDV) and (c) phenylalanine metabolised by the liver (Phe ILR-Liver). ■, 12·0 % CP-starch diet; ●, 12·0 % CP-fibre diet; □, 16·5 % CP-starch diet; ○, 16·5 % CP-fibre diet. Fitted equations are as follows: Δ15Nplasma protein= 1·39( ± 0·29)+0·0081 ( ± 0·0019) × liver urea synthesis (n 15; r2 0·59; P< 0·001); Δ15Nplasma protein= 1·49( ± 0·19)+0·076( ± 0·012) × Leu ILR-PDV (n 19; r2 0·71; P< 0·001); Δ15Nplasma protein= 0·86( ± 0·37)+0·160( ± 0·034) × Phe ILR-Liver (n 16; r2 0·63; P< 0·001).