Impact of Dietary Administration of Seaweed Polysaccharide on Growth, Microbial Abundance, and Growth and Immune-Related Genes Expression of The Pacific Whiteleg Shrimp ( Litopenaeus vannamei ).
Eman M AbbasAhmed Said Al-SoutiZaki Z SharawyEhab El-HarounMohamed AshourPublished in: Life (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
This work aims to determine the impact of dietary supplementation of polysaccharide, extracted from brown seaweeds Sargassum dentifolium on growth indices, feed utilization, biochemical compositions, microbial abundance, expressions of growth and immunity-related genes, and stress genes of the Pacific Whiteleg shrimp Litopenaeus vannamei . A total of 360 post-larvae of L. vannamei were randomly distributed into a 12-glass aquarium (40 L of each) at a stocking density of 30 shrimp with an initial weight of (0.0017 ± 0.001 g). During the 90-day experiment trial, all shrimp larvae were fed their respective diets at 10% of total body weight, three times a day. Three experimental diets were prepared with different seaweed polysaccharide (SWP) levels. The basal control diet had no polysaccharide level (SWP 0 ), while SWP 1 , SWP 2 , and SWP 3 contained polysaccharides at concentrations of 1, 2, and 3 g kg -1 diet, respectively. Diets supplemented with polysaccharide levels showed significant improvements in weight gain and survival rate, compared to the control diet. Whole-body biochemical composition and the microbial abundance (the total count of heterotrophic bacteria and Vibrio spp.) of L. vannamei showed significant differences among polysaccharide-treated diets compared to the control. At the end of the feeding experiment, the dietary supplementation of polysaccharide levels enhanced the expression of growth-related genes (Insulin-like growth factors ( IGF-I, IGF-II ), immune-related genes ( β -Glucan-binding protein ( β-Bgp ), Prophenoloxidase ( ProPO ), Lysozyme ( Lys ), and Crustin ), and stress genes (Superoxide dismutase ( SOD ) and Glutathione peroxidase ( GPx ) in the muscle tissue of L. vannamei . However, the current study concluded that the inclusion rate of 2 g kg -1 of polysaccharide as a dietary additive administration enhanced both weight gain and survival rate of L. vannamei , while the incorporation level of 3 g kg -1 reduces the abundance of pathogenic microbes and enhances the growth-, immunity- and stress-related gene expressions of L. vannamei .
Keyphrases
- weight gain
- weight loss
- binding protein
- body mass index
- physical activity
- body weight
- microbial community
- poor prognosis
- water soluble
- genome wide
- type diabetes
- clinical trial
- antibiotic resistance genes
- escherichia coli
- hydrogen peroxide
- gene expression
- insulin resistance
- long non coding rna
- transcription factor
- nitric oxide
- staphylococcus aureus
- genome wide identification
- biofilm formation
- zika virus
- open label
- pseudomonas aeruginosa
- pi k akt
- phase iii
- growth hormone
- drosophila melanogaster
- adipose tissue