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A 45‐day feeding trial was carried out to investigate the effects of dietary selenium yeast (Se‐yeast) on the survival, growth performance, activities of digestive enzymes and antioxidant enzymes, and body composition of early juvenile Apostichopus japonicus. Five isoprotic (15.6%) and isolipic (1.5%) feeds with graded levels of Se‐yeast (0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 mg/kg) were formulated and randomly allocated to the early juvenile sea cucumbers (initial weight: 0.11 ± 0.01 g). The results showed that the weight gain rate (WGR) and relative visceral weight ratio (RVW) significantly increased as the Se‐yeast supplementation increased from 0 to 1.0 mg/kg, and then reached a plateau with further increase in Se‐yeast, while survival rate (SR) increased as the supplementation level of Se‐yeast increased, and the lipase and amylase activities first significantly increased as the Se‐yeast increased from 0 to 1.0 mg/kg, and then significantly decreased with the continuous supplementation of Se‐yeast. The antioxidant capacity and nonspecific immunity were significantly elevated by the moderate level (0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg) of Se‐yeast. Besides, the activities of immune‐related enzymes and transcription of antioxidation‐related genes were significantly elevated by the supplementation of Se‐yeast. However, malonaldehyde contents were significantly reduced in the treatments with 0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg Se‐yeast. The selenium content in the body wall of the sea cucumber showed a markedly increasing trend with increasing Se‐yeast supplementation levels. Results above indicated that a moderate level (0.5–1.0 mg/kg) of Se‐yeast enhanced the growth performance, digestive enzyme activities, antioxidant capacity and nonspecific immunity of early juvenile A. japonicus.
A 45‐day feeding trial was carried out to investigate the effects of dietary selenium yeast (Se‐yeast) on the survival, growth performance, activities of digestive enzymes and antioxidant enzymes, and body composition of early juvenile Apostichopus japonicus. Five isoprotic (15.6%) and isolipic (1.5%) feeds with graded levels of Se‐yeast (0, 0.5, 1.0, 1.5 and 2.0 mg/kg) were formulated and randomly allocated to the early juvenile sea cucumbers (initial weight: 0.11 ± 0.01 g). The results showed that the weight gain rate (WGR) and relative visceral weight ratio (RVW) significantly increased as the Se‐yeast supplementation increased from 0 to 1.0 mg/kg, and then reached a plateau with further increase in Se‐yeast, while survival rate (SR) increased as the supplementation level of Se‐yeast increased, and the lipase and amylase activities first significantly increased as the Se‐yeast increased from 0 to 1.0 mg/kg, and then significantly decreased with the continuous supplementation of Se‐yeast. The antioxidant capacity and nonspecific immunity were significantly elevated by the moderate level (0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg) of Se‐yeast. Besides, the activities of immune‐related enzymes and transcription of antioxidation‐related genes were significantly elevated by the supplementation of Se‐yeast. However, malonaldehyde contents were significantly reduced in the treatments with 0.5 and 1.0 mg/kg Se‐yeast. The selenium content in the body wall of the sea cucumber showed a markedly increasing trend with increasing Se‐yeast supplementation levels. Results above indicated that a moderate level (0.5–1.0 mg/kg) of Se‐yeast enhanced the growth performance, digestive enzyme activities, antioxidant capacity and nonspecific immunity of early juvenile A. japonicus.
Background The development of a sustainable business model with social acceptance, makes necessary to develop new strategies to guarantee the growth, health, and well-being of farmed animals. Debaryomyces hansenii is a yeast species that can be used as a probiotic in aquaculture due to its capacity to i) promote cell proliferation and differentiation, ii) have immunostimulatory effects, iii) modulate gut microbiota, and/or iv) enhance the digestive function. To provide inside into the effects of D. hansenii on juveniles of gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) condition, we integrated the evaluation of the main key performance indicators coupled with the integrative analysis of the intestine condition, through histological and microbiota state, and its transcriptomic profiling. Results After 70 days of a nutritional trial in which a diet with low levels of fishmeal (7%) was supplemented with 1.1% of D. hansenii (17.2 × 105 CFU), an increase of ca. 12% in somatic growth was observed together with an improvement in feed conversion in fish fed a yeast-supplemented diet. In terms of intestinal condition, this probiotic modulated gut microbiota without affecting the intestine cell organization, whereas an increase in the staining intensity of mucins rich in carboxylated and weakly sulphated glycoconjugates coupled with changes in the affinity for certain lectins were noted in goblet cells. Changes in microbiota were characterized by the reduction in abundance of several groups of Proteobacteria, especially those characterized as opportunistic groups. The microarrays-based transcriptomic analysis found 232 differential expressed genes in the anterior-mid intestine of S. aurata, that were mostly related to metabolic, antioxidant, immune, and symbiotic processes. Conclusions Dietary administration of D. hansenii enhanced somatic growth and improved feed efficiency parameters, results that were coupled to an improvement of intestinal condition as histochemical and transcriptomic tools indicated. This probiotic yeast stimulated host-microbiota interactions without altering the intestinal cell organization nor generating dysbiosis, which demonstrated its safety as a feed additive. At the transcriptomic level, D. hansenii promoted metabolic pathways, mainly protein-related, sphingolipid, and thymidylate pathways, in addition to enhance antioxidant-related intestinal mechanisms, and to regulate sentinel immune processes, potentiating the defensive capacity meanwhile maintaining the homeostatic status of the intestine.
Shrimp aquaculture is constantly threatened by recurrent outbreaks of diseases caused by pathogenic bacteria of the genus Vibrio. Acute hepatopancreatic necrosis disease (AHPND) is one of the most aggressive vibriosis reported to date in the shrimp industry. AHPND provokes massive mortalities, causing economic losses with strong social impacts. Control of vibriosis requires the application of multifactorial strategies. This includes vibrio exclusion, shrimp microbiota, particularly in the digestive tract, and shrimp health management through immune stimulation. This paper reviews these two strategies for the prophylactic control of vibriosis. First, we describe the devastating effects of AHPND and the cellular and humoral effectors of the shrimp immune system to cope with this pathology. Secondly, the mechanisms of action of probiotics and their positive impacts are highlighted, including their immunostimulant effects and their role in the balance of the shrimp microbiota. Finally, we reviewed immunostimulants and prebiotics polysaccharides that together with probiotics act benefiting growth, feed efficiency and the microbiota of the digestive tract of farmed shrimp.
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