The digestive enzyme activities of Pacific bluefin tuna Thunnus orientalis were evaluated for specific activity and characterized for pH and temperature optima in crude extracts of stomach, caecal mass, and proximal, middle and distal intestine. A higher level of alkaline proteolytic activity was detected in the caecal mass than in the proximal intestine. Total alkaline proteases, trypsin, chymotrypsin and leucine aminopeptidase (LAP) were tested. The temperature and pH analyses showed that proteolytic activity as well as lipase were maximal in the alkaline range, with a maximum at pH 9.0 and at temperatures between 35 and 60°C, except for the pepsin, which showed maximum activity at the same temperatures but in the acid range (pH 3.0). The a-amylase activity showed a broader range in activity, both for pH and temperature, with higher activity over the alkaline pH values and higher temperature. The lipase activity seems to be nondependent on bile salts under our assay conditions, resulting in a significant activity reduction in the presence of bile salts. This knowledge will allow the development of a gastrointestinal model (everted intestine) where food or feed will be hydrolysed with the fish's own enzymes, a project that is being undertaken in our laboratory as a contribution to the development of novel diets for tuna fish.
The kinetics of amino acid absorption in the proximal section of three fish species were studied using an everted intestine technique and a pancreatic digest of casein (Tryptone), as the model amino acid mixture. Fresh intestine of rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) was used to set up the experimental system, and results were compared with those obtained using intestines from totoaba (Totoaba macdonaldi) and bluefin tuna fish (Thunnus orientalis). The kinetics of amino acid absorption was sigmoidal for all amino acids and for each species of fish tested. In general, specific absorptions of essential amino acids were higher than those of non‐essential ones. No correlation between the concentration of amino acids in the Tryptone solution and the corresponding absorptions was found. The maximum specific absorption rates of all amino acids for trout were 10 times higher than those determined for totoaba and bluefin tuna. The relative amounts of the different amino acids preferentially absorbed in all three species were different. Results obtained from the everted technique may be applicable to the design of formulated diets for large fish species with commercial value.
Beta-carotene-15,15'-oxygenase (betaCO), found mainly in intestinal mucosa and liver, is the enzyme responsible for cleaving beta-carotene into retinal, which can be used or stored at these sites or carried by the bloodstream to different target cells within the body. We isolated the cDNA for bovine betaCO and demonstrated its expression in gonadal tissues. A cDNA of 2130 base pairs (bp) was obtained by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) and rapid amplification of cDNA ends (RACE), using degenerate oligonucleotides; the deduced protein shared an identity of 75% with its homologues from other mammalian species. In order to evaluate the expression of this enzyme, we performed RT-PCR and in situ hybridizations in the ovary and testis of bovines. RT-PCR showed the expression of betaCO in testis, ovary, and cultured granulosa cells. In situ hybridization of complete ovary and testis revealed expression in granulosa cells and the corpus luteum in the ovary and in germinal and interstitial cells in the testis. These results suggest that beta-carotene could act as a local source of retinoids, which have been shown to be important during proliferation, differentiation, and maturation of both female and male germinal cells.
Raw potato starch and some modified starches cause caecal enlargement when fed to rats as the sole carbohydrate source in synthetic diets containing 18-20 % It has been argued that caecal enlargement is a process of physiological adaptation controlled by osmotic processes.2, However, in the authors' laboratory, deaths occurred among rats fed a diet containing Toxicol. 1974,12,651. 3 . Leegwater, D. C.; de Groot, A. P.; van Kalmthout-Kuyper, M.Extracts of the yeast, Candida tropicah grown on tetradecane, contain a cytochrome P-4.50 (much like the well-known drug-metabolising enzyme of liver) that can hydroxylate fatty acids such as lauric acid and demethylate drugs such as aminopyrine.'s2 Growth conditions have been described in Brewer's yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae (NCYC NO. 240) for cytochrome P-450 bios~nthesis.~ Yeast grown for 17-40 h in 1 % glucose or 20-70 h in 20% glucose (whole, Heat-Stable Yeast Invertase
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