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Oxidative Stress Response of Meagre to Dietary Black Soldier Fly Meal.

Inês GuerreiroCarolina CastroCláudia Alexandra Dos Reis SerraFilipe CoutinhoAna CoutoHelena PeresPedro Pousão-FerreiraLaura GascoFrancesco GaiAires Oliva-TelesPaula Enes
Published in: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI (2022)
This study aimed to assess the effect of Hermetia illucens meal (HM) dietary inclusion on meagre oxidative status. Thus, fish were fed a fishmeal-based diet (CTR diet) and three other diets with increasing levels of HM inclusion, namely 10%, 20%, and 30% (diets HM10, HM20, and HM30, respectively). At the end of the trial, hepatic and intestine superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase activities and malondialdehyde concentration were unaffected by the diet composition. Liver glutathione peroxidase activity was higher in the fish fed the HM20 diet than in the fish fed the CTR and HM30 diets, and glutathione reductase activity linearly increased with the dietary HM level. The hepatic total glutathione and reduced glutathione contents were significantly lower in fish fed the HM20 diet than in fish fed the CTR and HM10 diets. In the intestine, the oxidized glutathione (GSSG) content and oxidative stress index linearly increased with the increase in dietary HM level, with the GSSG content of fish fed the HM20 diet being significantly higher than of fish fed the CTR diet. In conclusion, 30% HM might be included in meagre diets without negatively affecting hepatic and intestine oxidative status.
Keyphrases
  • weight loss
  • physical activity
  • oxidative stress
  • type diabetes
  • dna damage
  • randomized controlled trial
  • hydrogen peroxide
  • adipose tissue
  • signaling pathway
  • blood glucose
  • ischemia reperfusion injury
  • phase ii