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Appl Environ Microbiol. 1968 May; 16(5): 680-688
Copyright © 1968 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

In Vitro Lactate Metabolism by Ruminal Ingesta1

L. D. Satter and W. J. Esdale

Dairy Science Department, University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin 53706

ABSTRACT

Ruminal ingesta (300 ml) obtained from a fistulated cow fed alfalfa hay (H), 3.6 kg of grain mixture with corn silage fed ad libitum (S), 2.5:1 grain-alfalfa hay mixture (G), or a 2.5:1 grain-alfalfa hay mixture providing 545 g of sodium and calcium lactate daily (L) were incubated for 8 hr with nonpolymerized sodium lactate or 17% polymerized lactic acid neutralized to pH 6.7. Polymerization had no effect on the rate of lactate utilization. The initial rates of lactate metabolism for the H, G, S, and L ingesta were 0.72, 0.95, 1.8, and 3.4 meq per 100 ml of rumen fluid per hr, respectively. Lactate-2-14C was incubated for 4 hr with each type of ruminal ingesta. Of the label recovered in the volatile fatty acids (VFA), 74.1, 61.2, 49.3, and 38.9% was recovered in acetate, and 9.4, 19.8, 23.3, and 51.9% was recovered in propionate with H, G, S, and L ingesta, respectively. The balance of label was distributed between butyrate and valerate. The titratable VFA did not follow this pattern of production. With the hay ingesta, lactate metabolism resulted in a net loss of acetate and a large increase in butyrate. Little propionate was produced. The G, S, and L ingesta metabolized lactate to yield progressively more propionate and less butyrate. Evidence was gathered to suggest that acetate was the primary end product of lactate metabolism but that oxidation of lactate to pyruvate dictated the synthesis of butyrate from acetate to maintain an oxidation-reduction balance. It was noted that acetate and butyrate production from lactate was pH-dependent, with acetate production maximal at pH 7.4 and butyrate at 6.2. Propionate production was largely unaffected within this pH range.


FOOTNOTES

1 Published with the approval of the Director of the Wisconsin Agricultural Experiment Station.


Appl Environ Microbiol. 1968 May; 16(5): 680-688
Copyright © 1968 American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.







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