Supplemental Choline Modulates Growth Performance and Gut Inflammation by Altering the Gut Microbiota and Lipid Metabolism in Weaned Piglets

Whether dietary choline and bile acids affect lipid use via gut microbiota is unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effect of choline and bile acids on growth performance, lipid use, intestinal immunology, gut microbiota, and bacterial metabolites in weaned piglets. A total of 128 weaned pigl...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of nutrition 2021-01, Vol.151 (1), p.20-29
Hauptverfasser: Qiu, Yueqin, Liu, Shilong, Hou, Lei, Li, Kebiao, Wang, Li, Gao, Kaiguo, Yang, Xuefen, Jiang, Zongyong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Whether dietary choline and bile acids affect lipid use via gut microbiota is unclear. This study aimed to investigate the effect of choline and bile acids on growth performance, lipid use, intestinal immunology, gut microbiota, and bacterial metabolites in weaned piglets. A total of 128 weaned piglets [Duroc × (Landrace × Yorkshire), 21-d-old, 8.21 ± 0.20 kg body weight (BW)] were randomly allocated to 4 treatments (8 replicate pens per treatment, each pen containing 2 males and 2 females; n = 32 per treatment) for 28 d. Piglets were fed a control diet (CON) or the CON diet supplemented with 597 mg choline/kg (C), 500 mg bile acids/kg (BA) or both (C + BA) in a 2 × 2 factorial design. Growth performance, intestinal function, gut microbiota, and metabolites were determined. Compared with diets without choline, choline supplementation increased BW gain (6.13%), average daily gain (9.45%), gain per feed (8.18%), jejunal lipase activity (60.2%), and duodenal IL10 gene expression (51%), and decreased the mRNA abundance of duodenal TNFA (TNFα) (40.7%) and jejunal toll-like receptor 4 (32.9%) (P 
ISSN:0022-3166
1541-6100
DOI:10.1093/jn/nxaa331