Different dietary combinations of high/low starch and fat with or without bile acid supplementation on growth, liver histopathology, gene expression and fatty acid composition of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides

High dietary levels of fat and/or starch can lower the growth and cause extensive liver inflammation that is linked to mortalities in largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides. However, bile acids (BA) may mitigate these adverse effects. In a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial feeding trial, M. salmoides juveniles we...

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Veröffentlicht in:Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part A, Molecular & integrative physiology Molecular & integrative physiology, 2022-04, Vol.266, p.111157-111157, Article 111157
Hauptverfasser: Romano, Nicholas, Fischer, Hayden, Rubio-Benito, Marina M., Overtuf, Ken, Sinha, Amit Kumar, Kumar, Vikas
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container_title Comparative biochemistry and physiology. Part A, Molecular & integrative physiology
container_volume 266
creator Romano, Nicholas
Fischer, Hayden
Rubio-Benito, Marina M.
Overtuf, Ken
Sinha, Amit Kumar
Kumar, Vikas
description High dietary levels of fat and/or starch can lower the growth and cause extensive liver inflammation that is linked to mortalities in largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides. However, bile acids (BA) may mitigate these adverse effects. In a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial feeding trial, M. salmoides juveniles were fed different combinations of dietary high (HF), low fat (LF), high (HS) or low starch (LS) levels with or without BA supplementations at 1% for 8 weeks. A total of 8 isonitrogenous diets were formulated to include, HF/LS, HF/HS, LF/HS, LF/LS, HF/LS-BA, HF/HS-BA, LF/HS-BA and LF/LS-BA. Survival, growth performance, feeding efficiency, whole-body proximate composition, muscle/liver fatty acid composition, hepatic expression of growth regulator (GH/IGF1 axis), lipid metabolism (fatty acid synthase ‘FASN’ and cholesterol 7 alpha-hydroxylase ‘CYP7A1’) and antioxidant capacity (superoxide dismutase ‘SOD’) genes as well as liver histopathology were assessed. Results showed that among diets without BA, there was no significant effect on growth or feeding efficiency, but when BA was included this led to more variable effects including significantly higher weight gain in the LF/HS-BA group compared to all others fed BA. The HF, HS or their combination led to extensive hepatic inflammation, but BA appeared to partially mitigate this in the LF/HS group (i.e. LF/HS-BA). No abnormal liver histopathology was observed in the LF/LS and LF/LS-BA treatments. Muscle 22:6n-3 was significantly higher in the HF/LS and HF/HS-BA groups compared to those fed the HF/HS or LF/LS diets. Dietary fat had a significant effect on the moisture, crude lipid, and caloric content of M. salmoides. Hepatic expression of IGF-I and CYP7A1 were differentially modulated under different treatments. Overall, these results show that BA can alleviate some liver inflammation caused by high dietary starch; however the LF/LS diets led to a better balance between growth performance and liver health. [Display omitted] •Different combinations of low/high starch and low/high lipid, without bile acids (BA) had no effect on growth.•High dietary starch and/or lipids caused severe hepatic inflammation based on histological observations.•Dietary BA mitigated hepatic inflammation in the low fat/high starch group.•High fat/low starch or high fat/high starch with BA increased muscle 22:6n3.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.cbpa.2022.111157
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Results showed that among diets without BA, there was no significant effect on growth or feeding efficiency, but when BA was included this led to more variable effects including significantly higher weight gain in the LF/HS-BA group compared to all others fed BA. The HF, HS or their combination led to extensive hepatic inflammation, but BA appeared to partially mitigate this in the LF/HS group (i.e. LF/HS-BA). No abnormal liver histopathology was observed in the LF/LS and LF/LS-BA treatments. Muscle 22:6n-3 was significantly higher in the HF/LS and HF/HS-BA groups compared to those fed the HF/HS or LF/LS diets. Dietary fat had a significant effect on the moisture, crude lipid, and caloric content of M. salmoides. Hepatic expression of IGF-I and CYP7A1 were differentially modulated under different treatments. 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Part A, Molecular &amp; integrative physiology</jtitle><addtitle>Comp Biochem Physiol A Mol Integr Physiol</addtitle><date>2022-04</date><risdate>2022</risdate><volume>266</volume><spage>111157</spage><epage>111157</epage><pages>111157-111157</pages><artnum>111157</artnum><issn>1095-6433</issn><eissn>1531-4332</eissn><abstract>High dietary levels of fat and/or starch can lower the growth and cause extensive liver inflammation that is linked to mortalities in largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides. However, bile acids (BA) may mitigate these adverse effects. In a 2 × 2 × 2 factorial feeding trial, M. salmoides juveniles were fed different combinations of dietary high (HF), low fat (LF), high (HS) or low starch (LS) levels with or without BA supplementations at 1% for 8 weeks. A total of 8 isonitrogenous diets were formulated to include, HF/LS, HF/HS, LF/HS, LF/LS, HF/LS-BA, HF/HS-BA, LF/HS-BA and LF/LS-BA. Survival, growth performance, feeding efficiency, whole-body proximate composition, muscle/liver fatty acid composition, hepatic expression of growth regulator (GH/IGF1 axis), lipid metabolism (fatty acid synthase ‘FASN’ and cholesterol 7 alpha-hydroxylase ‘CYP7A1’) and antioxidant capacity (superoxide dismutase ‘SOD’) genes as well as liver histopathology were assessed. Results showed that among diets without BA, there was no significant effect on growth or feeding efficiency, but when BA was included this led to more variable effects including significantly higher weight gain in the LF/HS-BA group compared to all others fed BA. The HF, HS or their combination led to extensive hepatic inflammation, but BA appeared to partially mitigate this in the LF/HS group (i.e. LF/HS-BA). No abnormal liver histopathology was observed in the LF/LS and LF/LS-BA treatments. Muscle 22:6n-3 was significantly higher in the HF/LS and HF/HS-BA groups compared to those fed the HF/HS or LF/LS diets. 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identifier ISSN: 1095-6433
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subjects Animal Feed - analysis
Animals
Bass
Bile acid
Bile Acids and Salts - metabolism
Diet - veterinary
Dietary Supplements
Fatty Acids - metabolism
Gene Expression
Granulomas
High fat
High starch
Liver - metabolism
Liver inflammation
Starch - metabolism
title Different dietary combinations of high/low starch and fat with or without bile acid supplementation on growth, liver histopathology, gene expression and fatty acid composition of largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides
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