In vitro characterization of amino acid digestibility and fermentative properties of a specific hydrolyzed yeast, and its in vivo effects on growth performance and fecal microbiota in weanling piglets
Fernando Bravo de Laguna, Caroline S. Achard, Lysiane Dunière, Elsa Parmentier, Katia Helmja, Bruno Bertaud, Pierre Lebreton, David Saornil, Eric Chevaux, Mathieu Castex, Emmanuelle Apper

TL;DR
This study shows that adding a hydrolyzed yeast protein to piglet diets improves growth and gut health by enhancing nutrient absorption and altering the gut microbiota.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel hydrolyzed yeast protein source and demonstrates its in vitro and in vivo benefits for weanling piglets.
Findings
YPS showed high amino acid digestibility in vitro, reaching 89.8% after 48 hours.
YPS improved body weight and feed intake in weanling piglets compared to controls.
YPS modulated fecal microbiota, increasing beneficial bacteria and reducing harmful ones.
Abstract
Weaning is a stressful event that is often accompanied by anorexia, risk of diarrhea, and development of intestinal disorders, making it crucial to provide highly digestible and palatable diets. Novel functional protein sources are being developed to be included in diets fed to weanling pigs. We evaluated in vitro and in vivo the properties of a recently developed hydrolyzed yeast protein source (Yela ProSecure; YPS; Lallemand SAS, Blagnac, France). The objectives were (1) to evaluate in vitro amino acids (AA) digestibility; (2) to assess, in vitro, the impact of the product’s insoluble fraction (YPSi) on the fermentative activity of piglet fecal microbiota; and (3) to test the effects of two inclusion levels (2.5 and 6%) on growth performance and fecal microbiota in weanling piglets. The total AA availability after 3 h of digestion was 76.6%, reaching 89.8% after 48 h. YPSi induced…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Gut microbiota and health · Probiotics and Fermented Foods
