RESUMO
The aim of the present study was to determine the minimum requirement of Ile in young pigs, enabling feeding of balanced low-CP diets. Most previous studies have used experimental diets that included blood cells, which are particularly high in Leu and known to antagonize the use of Ile. One week after weaning at d 28, 100 crossbred female pigs weighing 7.9 ± 0.7 kg were allocated to 1 of 5 dietary treatments. Diets were formulated to contain 1.15 g standardized ileal digestible (SID) Lys/MJ NE and were free of blood cells. The SID Ile was 0.42, 0.47, 0.53, 0.58, and 0.62 relative to Lys. The other indispensable AA were supplied according to requirements. Representative samples from the 5 diets were analyzed in 4 replicates at 3 different laboratories. The pigs were fed ad libitum and individually housed in 7 identical rooms during a 21-d period. At d 0, 7, 14, and 21, the pigs were weighed, and feed intake was determined. At d 15, blood samples were collected from the jugular vein to determine the plasma urea and free AA content. There were differences among the 3 laboratories in the analyzed content of several AA, and also Ile and Lys showed a large variation within the diets, which may cause variation in published requirement estimates. The concentration of Ile in plasma increased linearly (P < 0.01), and Lys in plasma decreased linearly (P = 0.02) with increasing SID Ile:Lys. A tendency for a linear decrease in plasma concentration was found for Thr (P = 0.10). Both ADFI and ADG were reduced when Ile was supplied above the Ile requirement estimate. Quadratic regression curves on ADFI, ADG, and G:F all showed the maximum at 0.52 SID Ile:Lys. Modeling with 2-sloped quadratic broken-line curves showed the maximum at 0.50, 0.53, and 0.54 SID Ile:Lys for ADFI, ADG, and G:F, respectively. In conclusion, the average estimation of requirement in this dose-response study using blood cell-free diets was 0.52 SID Ile:Lys during a 21-d experimental period from 8 kg BW.