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Effects of Dietary Supplementation of Bile Acids on Growth, Glucose Metabolism, and Intestinal Health of Spotted Seabass (). | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • An 8-week study tested how different levels of dietary bile acids affected the growth, glucose metabolism, and intestinal health of spotted seabass at high temperatures (33°C).
  • Fish were fed diets with varying bile acid levels (0, 400, 800, and 1200 mg/kg), with the 800 mg/kg group showing significant growth promotion compared to the control group.
  • This dietary supplementation also improved liver glucose metabolism, enhanced intestinal structure and enzyme activities, and reduced inflammation while boosting antioxidant responses in the fish.

Article Abstract

An 8-week feeding trial was performed to investigate the effects of dietary bile acids on growth, glucose metabolism, and intestinal health in spotted seabass () reared at high temperatures (33 °C). The fish (20.09 ± 1.12 g) were fed diets supplemented with bile acids: 0 (Con), 400 (BA400), 800 (BA800), and 1200 (BA1200) mg/kg, respectively. The results showed that the growth was promoted in fish at the BA800 treatment compared with the control ( < 0.05). Increased enzyme activities and transcripts of gluconeogenesis in the liver were observed, whereas decreased enzyme activities and transcripts of glycolysis, as well as glycogen content, were shown in the BA800 treatment ( < 0.05). The transcripts of bile acid receptors in the liver were up-regulated in the BA800 treatment ( < 0.05). A bile acid supplementation of 800 mg/kg improved the morphological structure in the intestine. Meanwhile, intestinal antioxidant physiology and activities of lipase and trypsin were enhanced in the BA800 treatment. The transcripts of genes and immunofluorescence intensity related to pro-inflammation cytokines (, , and ) were inhibited, while those of genes related to anti-inflammation ( and ) were induced in the BA800 treatment. Furthermore, transcripts of genes related to the NF-κB pathway in the intestine (, , , and ) were down-regulated in the BA800 treatment. This study demonstrates that a dietary bile acid supplementation of 800 mg/kg could promote growth, improve glucose metabolism in the liver, and enhance intestinal health by increasing digestive enzyme activity and antioxidant capacity and inhibiting inflammatory response in .

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11083208PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani14091299DOI Listing

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