Submitting Institution
University of AberdeenUnit of Assessment
Biological SciencesSummary Impact Type
EconomicResearch Subject Area(s)
Biological Sciences: Biochemistry and Cell Biology, Genetics
Summary of the impact
When Rowett Research Institute (now Rowett Institute of Nutrition and
Health, University of Aberdeen; RINH) scientists discovered that yeast,
when used as a feed additive in ruminants, protected vulnerable, anaerobic
microorganisms in the rumen from oxygen toxicity, the finding made sense
of a range of disparate observations made previously by RINH scientists
and others. The removal of oxygen leads to a cascade of benefits to
ruminal fibre digestion, lactate metabolism and bacterial growth
efficiency, which in turn benefits animal health and productivity. This
seminal discovery transformed confidence among the livestock industry in
the benefits of yeast as a feed additive. The use of live yeast in
ruminant livestock production increased enormously as a result, such that
the great majority of cattle in North America, and millions of cattle in
Europe, now receive yeast routinely as a feed additive. Productivity has
increased significantly as a consequence. Claimed impacts have
therefore been on animal health, husbandry, animal production yields,
and hence on the economy, commerce and industry.
Underpinning research
Before this discovery was made, a number of yeast, fungal and bacterial
products had been suggested to have beneficial effects if provided as a
feed additive to ruminants, with relatively little good evidence to
underpin their use. Little if any mechanistic information was available. A
DTI-LINK consortium consisting of 15 industrial companies and RINH was set
up to investigate these claims. The work of this consortium and subsequent
research contracts on this topic took place from 1990-1998 [1,3,4], with
intermittent projects being undertaken up to and including 2012.
Yeast culture contains live yeast cells and residues of growth medium. In
research undertaken at RINH, Wallace established that yeast culture
stimulated the growth of ruminal cellulolytic bacteria, which are critical
for optimal digestion of feeds, in the mixed rumen microbial community.
The additive also lessened the incidence of acidosis, by rendering the
mixed ruminal community less prone to lactic acid production, and
increased the proportion of viable bacteria that could be recovered from
the rumen (both shown first by the RINH team). However, the underlying
mechanism was not understood, particularly how two apparently unrelated
processes, carried out by different species of microorganism, benefitted
from yeast supplementation. As a consequence, the feed industry and
livestock producers generally had little faith in such products.
Several avenues were investigated by the Rowett research group led by Dr
John Wallace (Principal Scientific Officer), supported by Dr Jamie Newbold
as Senior Scientific Officer (now Director of Research at IBERS,
Aberystwyth University) and Dr Ian Edwards, lecturer at the University of
Aberdeen (retired in 2008). The discovery that provided incontrovertible
evidence of yeast's mode of action was made in a series of experiments in
which oxygen contamination in the rumen was the focus. Pure culture
experiments showed that Fibrobacter succinogenes (the main
cellulose digester) grew more quickly on cellulose when yeast was present.
When traces of air were introduced into the growth tube, the growth
inhibition which normally occurred was prevented by yeast. Twenty-one day
incubations with ruminal digesta in vitro demonstrated once again
the protective effect of yeast when air was introduced in small
concentrations. Similar observations were made with ruminally cannulated
sheep [1,2]. The most convincing evidence was provided when different
strains of yeast and different cultivation conditions were compared: the
benefit of the yeast was proportional to its respiratory activity. Strains
with low O2-scavenging activity stimulated the fermentation far
less than those with high respiratory activity. Furthermore, when
respiration-defective mutants of one of the latter strains were tested,
they lacked any stimulatory activity in pure cultures or in the mixed
rumen.
The multiple effects of the yeast on ruminal fermentation could now be
seen as a cascade of events, flowing from the crucial protection of
vulnerable bacteria, including both cellulolytic bacteria and lactate
utilisers.
A period followed when the original observations were amplified and
examples were provided. It emerged that the response to yeast was
diet-dependent. In general, animals receiving diets that contained fresh
forage responded less than animals receiving winter rations. The RINH team
provided an explanation by comparing the oxygen-consuming activities of
different materials It emerged that grass has among the highest
oxygen-consuming activities in nature. Thus, freshly consumed grass
retains mitochondrial activity, which in turn detoxifies oxygen and
effectively protects ruminal microorganisms — an evolutionary adaptation
that works well. Conserved diets contain grains and silage with low
respiratory activity, however. These are the dietary conditions where
yeast is most effective.
Two papers were published on the central discovery, leading to an
acceptance by the scientific community [3, 4]. The main work of
dissemination was focussed on the feed and livestock industries, via
popular/trade articles and seminars/industry presentations. Many articles
appeared in national newspapers and in trade journals such as Farmers
Weekly and Feed Compounder. Proceedings papers from
presentations at international trade conferences in the UK, France, USA,
Mexico, Japan, Korea, China, Australia and New Zealand were distributed by
companies such as Alltech, Lallemand and Lesaffre. The dissemination
continues to the present day, the latest technical trade article appearing
in All about feed, a Reed International publication, in March
2013. More scientific papers followed on from the original discovery, and
invitations were received frequently to speak at animal science/nutrition
meetings. As a result, acceptance of yeast increased rapidly. Other
microbial additives fared less well: they lacked the oxygen-consuming
abilities of yeast.
Work on yeast has continued at the RINH. Throughout the years, until the
present, at least a dozen postgraduate students and visiting workers have
contributed to the research. Its effectiveness in combination with other
additives has been elucidated, and the effects on the microbial community
demonstrated. The latest example is a 2012 SPARK grant from the Technology
Strategy Board, which was awarded to investigate the applicability of
FLOW-FISH to community profile in beef cattle receiving yeast. This small
project enhanced once again RINH/ Aberdeen University involvement with
practical livestock production, namely NE Scotland beef farmers.
Invitations to speak about yeast at international conferences continue to
be received, and, partly as a consequence of the yeast work, John Wallace
was appointed in 2012 to the FEEDAP panel of EFSA, the European regulatory
authority on the safety of foods and feeds.
References to the research
Refereed papers
[1] Newbold, CJ, R.J. Wallace, X.B. Chen, and F.M. McIntosh. (1995).
Different strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae differ in their
effects on ruminal bacterial numbers in vitro and in sheep. J.
Anim. Sci. 73:1811-1818. This paper provided a corollary to the BJN
paper below: the efficacy was strain-dependent and corresponded to
respiratory activity.
[2] Elhassan, SM, CJ Newbold, IE Edwards, JH Topps, and RJ Wallace.
(1996). Effect of yeast culture on rumen fermentation, microbial protein
flow from the rumen and live-weight gain in bulls given high cereal diets.
Anim. Sci. 62:43-48. This paper provided in vivo evidence of
the in vitro observations.
[3] Newbold, CJ, RJ Wallace, and FM McIntosh. (1996). Mode of action of
the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae as a feed additive for
ruminants. Br. J. Nutr. 76:249-261. The seminal paper
that revealed the way in which yeast protected ruminal microorganisms
from oxygen toxicity.
[4] Newbold, CJ, FM McIntosh, and RJ Wallace. (1998). Changes in the
microbial population of a rumen-simulating fermenter in response to yeast
culture. Can. J. Anim. Sci. 78:241-244. In vitro demonstration
of the cascade effect mentioned above.
[5] Wallace, R.J, D Colombatto, and PH Robinson. (2007). Enzymes,
direct-fed microbials and plant extracts in ruminant nutrition. Anim.
Feed Sci. Technol. 145, 1-4. The editorial introduction to a
special issue that RINH staff co-edited, and contributed several
original papers. Yeast is the archetypal `direct-fed microbial'.
Popular press, technical
[6] Wallace, RJ (1996) The mode of action of yeast culture in modifying
rumen fermentation. In: Lyons, T.P. and Jacques, K.A. (Eds) Biotechnology
in the Feed Industry, pp.217-232. Nottingham, UK: Nottingham
University Press. One of many popular articles disseminating to the
industry.
Grant support
1989-93 Department of Trade & Industry, £720,000. `Efficacy and mode
of action of probiotics'. (with 8 others)
1995-98 Joint Studentship with the International Livestock Research
Institute (el Hassan)
1997 Monsanto Feed additives £132,000
2001 EC Fifth Framework Programme QLK5-CT-2001-00992 'Rumen-up' 2,551,000
euros (coordinator)
2003 Marie-Curie Fellowship to Karola Glaeser, € 114,072
2012 SPARK Technology Strategy Board, £5,000
PLUS annual core support £250-569K from the Scottish Government
Details of the impact
The knowledge that yeast culture protected vulnerable animals from oxygen
contamination of their ruminal fermentation led to a rapid increase in
acceptance of yeast culture by the feed industry and farmers [d]. Benefits
to health and productivity of cattle were observed across the globe. Sales
over sustained periods of time reflect whether farmers observe benefits.
Precise data on sales are protected, however, it is known that yeast is
supplied to the majority of feedlot cattle in North America, and in the UK
perhaps one-third of cattle receive yeast culture (particularly during
winter months when its benefits are most evident). One company, Alltech
Inc., has grown from a $10M annual turnover in 1990 to in excess of $200M
today, substantially on the back of yeast sales. Other companies that
feature yeast as their headline product have expanded too; they include
Lallemand, Diamond V, Biosaf and Lesaffre [a]. The last company's
marketing depends entirely on spin-offs from original observations made at
Aberdeen. The Lallemand product is marketed as the product LEVUCELL® SC as
a specific live yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae CNCM I-1077
preparation that enhances rumen efficiency. The product information states
that... "A feeding program using Lallemand products will have a
positive effect on your livestock business". See
http://www.lallemandanimalnutrition.com/our-products/ruminants/.
The `increased rumen efficiency' arises from the oxygen-protective
effect.' Another example, indicating the scale of use in North America,
can be found at http://www.rumenco.co.uk/product/19/Diamond-V-XP-Yeast.html.
[c].
A recent meta-analysis (Poppy et al., 2012, J. Dairy Sci. 95, 6027)
indicated that the benefit of yeast was an increased milk production of
1.16 kg/cow/day, or 423 kg/cow/yr. The farm gate price of milk is £0.31
per kg (http://www.dairyco.org.uk/market-information/supply-production/milk-production/uk-monthly-and-annual-milk-deliveries/), so the benefit
per cow would be £ 0.31 × 423 = 131/cow/year. The dairy herd comprises
1.81M cows (http://www.dairyco.org.uk/market-information/farming-data/cow-numbers/uk-cow-numbers/). A
conservative estimate would be that one-third of all UK dairy cows receive
yeast, therefore the total UK benefit from feeding yeast to dairy cows
would be £M 131 × 1.81/3 = £79M per annum. As the beef industry nationwide
has a value of £2.42bn (EBLEX, http://www.eblex.org.uk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2013/05/p_cp_eblex_balancing_the_market_final_220512.pdf),and
the percentage response in beef animals to yeast is greater than dairy,
the total benefit from yeast must exceed £110M per annum in the UK cattle
industry.
The impact of the research continues as the yeast market continues to
grow. The Ruminant Product Development Manager of AB Vista, formerly of
Lallemand, provided an analysis indicating that sales of yeast in the feed
industry globally were worth around £196M in 2009, growing to £214M in
2013 [b]. She indicated major opportunities for expansion in Eastern
European and Asian countries.
Part of the impact of the research was consultancy work generated as a
result of the discoveries, benefitting both the companies and the
University. The livestock industry is one that is acutely aware of
efficacy. If a product has no benefit, farmers won't use it. The vast
sales show that it does work and farmers' confidence is enhanced, partly
by the Aberdeen research results, which the feed companies transmit to
them as `how yeast works'. Confidential research contracts were awarded
through the then commercial arm of RINH, Rowett Research Services,
throughout the 1990s and 2000s with the major companies involved in yeast,
including Alltech, Lallemand, DCL Yeast Ltd, Biosaf, Lesaffre and Sanofi.
Therefore, research that catalysed the impact that has been manifest
within the REF window has its origins in the 1990's and continues to this
date. The discovery of the mode of action of yeast in the rumen led
directly to two contributions to legislation and contributed to a deep
involvement in another. Wallace was called to Brussels in 1999 to advise
the European Commission's Scientific Commission on Animal Nutrition (SCAN)
in drawing up their registration requirements to control feed additives:
in particular, SCAN needed to understand our findings that metabolically
active, but not necessarily live or growing yeast, can effect the benefits
to ruminal fermentation. The second direct involvement was that Wallace
wrote the mode of action section of the dossier submitted by Alltech to
SCAN in the late 1990s. The influence of Wallace's work on yeast, among
other feed additives, resulted in his appointment in 2012 to FEEDAP, the
successor to SCAN in the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), possibly
the greatest impact stemming from the original research. This research
continues to have policy relevance because, under Article 10.2 of
Regulation 1813/2003, all feed additives already approved and on the
market must be re-authorised. Evidence of the mechanism of action of yeast
as an animal food growth enhancer and the experience gained from the
research therefore have high relevance to current EFSA policy decisions.
Claimed impact as defined by REF guidance:
Thus the impact generated as defined by REF includes: impact on public
policy, legislation and and services. The team was also engaged by
leading companies to advise on dossiers to be submitted for regulatory
approval, thus having an impact on commerce in the area of gain in
productivity and reduction in costs of food. Demonstrable collaborations
with industry have occurred and commercial adaptation of a new process
concept and in husbandry methods has occurred. The research affected
animal health and production yields of livestock. Gains in productivity
have been realised as a result of research-led changes in practice.
Sources to corroborate the impact
As well as the above, examples are given in attached testimonials and
corroboration of specific claims made in this case study have been
provided by the following senior industry experts:-
[a] Ruminant Research and Development Manager, Lesaffre "Certainly the
results of research by Wallace and Newbold have been instrumental in
giving the livestock industry confidence in yeast products, including
our own."
[b] Ruminant Product Development Manager, AB Agri (part of AB Vista),
Marlborough, UK. "The papers published by the Wallace group in the
mid-90s ... marked a turning point in the exploitation of yeast as a
feed additive".
[c] President & Chief Science Officer, Sage Biosciences, Canada. "Without
your and your colleagues' efforts and findings, I doubt whether the
industry would have developed to its current level of sophistication"
[d] Ruminant Research and Development Director, Cargill Animal Nutrition,
Belgium. "Dr Wallace and his colleagues played a key role in
understanding the mode of action of live yeast ... This research
achievement has had a significant and lasting impact on ruminant animal
production".