Back to Search Start Over

Dietary High Glycinin Reduces Growth Performance and Impairs Liver and Intestinal Health Status of Orange-Spotted Grouper (Epinephelus coioides).

Authors :
Yin, Yanxia
Zhao, Xingqiao
Yang, Lulu
Wang, Kun
Sun, Yunzhang
Ye, Jidan
Source :
Animals (2076-2615). Aug2023, Vol. 13 Issue 16, p2605. 22p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Simple Summary: Soy antigen proteins are regarded as the cause of fish enteritis, of which glycinin is one of the main soy antigen proteins. By comparing different levels of glycinin within a high-soybean-meal diet, we found that dietary high glycinin (10%) could decrease hepatic antioxidant ability, lead to microbiota dysbiosis, and change the relative abundance of some intestinal microbiota and intestinal morphology, thereby causing intestinal inflammation. The results showed that dietary high glycinin (10%) may be the potential trigger of soybean-induced enteritis of orange-spotted grouper (Epinephelus coioides). The aim of the study was to investigate whether the negative effects of dietary glycinin are linked to the structural integrity damage, apoptosis promotion and microbiota alteration in the intestine of orange-spotted grouper (Epinephelus coioides). The basal diet (FM diet) was formulated to contain 48% protein and 11% lipid. Fish meal was replaced by soybean meal (SBM) in FM diets to prepare the SBM diet. Two experimental diets were prepared, containing 4.5% and 10% glycinin in the FM diets (G-4.5 and G-10, respectively). Triplicate groups of 20 fish in each tank (initial weight: 8.01 ± 0.10 g) were fed the four diets across an 8 week growth trial period. Fish fed SBM diets had reduced growth rate, hepatosomatic index, liver total antioxidant capacity and GSH-Px activity, but elevated liver MDA content vs. FM diets. The G-4.5 exhibited maximum growth and the G-10 exhibited a comparable growth with that of the FM diet group. The SBM and G-10 diets down-regulated intestinal tight junction function genes (occludin, claudin-3 and ZO-1) and intestinal apoptosis genes (caspase-3, caspase-8, caspase-9, bcl-2 and bcl-xL), but elevated blood diamine oxidase activity, D-lactic acid and endotoxin contents related to intestinal mucosal permeability, as well as the number of intestinal apoptosis vs FM diets. The intestinal abundance of phylum Proteobacteria and genus Vibrio in SBM diets were higher than those in groups receiving other diets. As for the expression of intestinal inflammatory factor genes, in SBM and G-10 diets vs. FM diets, pro-inflammatory genes (TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8) were up-regulated, but anti-inflammatory genes (TGF-β1 and IL-10) were down-regulated. The results indicate that dietary 10% glycinin rather than 4.5% glycinin could decrease hepatic antioxidant ability and destroy both the intestinal microbiota profile and morphological integrity through disrupting the tight junction structure of the intestine, increasing intestinal mucosal permeability and apoptosis. These results further trigger intestinal inflammatory reactions and even enteritis, ultimately leading to the poor growth of fish. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20762615
Volume :
13
Issue :
16
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Animals (2076-2615)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
170710127
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13162605