Effect of Guanidinoacetic Acid Supplementation on Growth Performance, Rumen Fermentation, Blood Indices, Nutrient Digestion, and Nitrogen Metabolism in Angus Steers
Simeng Yi, Sanlong Hu, Jinze Wang, Abudusaimijiang Abudukelimu, Yao Wang, Xiang Li, Hao Wu, Qingxiang Meng, Zhenming Zhou

TL;DR
Adding guanidinoacetic acid to the diet of Angus steers improved their growth, digestion, and nitrogen metabolism, with no extra benefit from higher doses.
Contribution
Demonstrates the positive effects of GAA supplementation on growth and metabolism in cattle, with insights into optimal dosing.
Findings
GAA increased average daily weight gain and feed conversion efficiency in Angus steers.
GAA improved rumen fermentation by altering acetate and propionate levels.
GAA enhanced nutrient digestion and nitrogen retention in cattle.
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of guanidinoacetic acid (GAA) supplementation on the growth performance, rumen fermentation, blood indices, nutrient digestion, and nitrogen metabolism of Angus steers. In a 130-day feeding experiment, steers receiving GAA at a conventional dose (0.8 g/kg) and a high dose (1.6 g/kg) exhibited significantly higher average daily weight gain and improved feed conversion efficiency compared to the control group without GAA. GAA supplementation also influenced rumen fermentation, with lower acetate levels, higher propionate levels, and higher acetate: propionate ratio in GAA groups. Blood analyses revealed elevated concentrations of urea, blood ammonia, GAA, creatine, and catalase, indicating improved creatine metabolism and antioxidant activity. A subsequent 3-day digestive metabolism experiment confirmed that the GAA-supplemented groups had increased dry…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Banach Space Theory
