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Inhibition of the Transsulfuration Pathway Affects Growth and Feather Follicle Development in Meat-Type Chickens.

José Humberto Vilar Da SilvaFernando González-CerónElizabeth W HowerthRomdhane RekayaSamuel E Aggrey
Published in: Animal biotechnology (2018)
Cysteine is a nonessential amino acid in poultry nutrition. Poultry diets are deficient in cysteine, but the bird's cysteine need is met through the transsulfuration pathway (TSP) where homocysteine is converted to cysteine: a process catalyzed by cystathionine β-synthase (CBS) and cystathionine γ-lyase (CTH). Cysteine is also a major component of keratinized protein found in feathers, but the extent to which cysteine is involved in feather and skin development in poultry is unknown. We randomly assigned chicks to control and treatment (control diet plus 100 mg/kg body weight of propargylglycine which is an inhibitor of CTH) diets. The thickness of skin layers, primary feather follicle parameters, growth, and mRNA expression of CBS and CTH were measured. Inhibition of TSP corresponded with the upregulation of liver mRNA of both CBS and CTH and reduction in growth from 35 to 40 days of age. The epidermis thickness, feather follicle length, and diameter were reduced from 10 to 40 days of age. Incorporation of cysteine into keratinized protein may be more sensitive to the level of available cysteine than into nonkeratinized proteins. Thus, disruption of the TSP could affect the thermoregulatory ability of the bird.
Keyphrases
  • fluorescent probe
  • living cells
  • amino acid
  • body weight
  • weight loss
  • binding protein
  • soft tissue
  • wound healing
  • combination therapy
  • heat stress