4.7 Article

Dietary soybean lecithin inclusion promotes growth, development, and intestinal morphology of yellow drum (Nibea albiflora) larvae

Journal

AQUACULTURE
Volume 559, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2022.738446

Keywords

Soybean lecithin; Larvae; Growth; Development; Intestinal morphology

Funding

  1. Kenon Biotechnology Co., Ltd. (Weifang, China) [41806206]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41806206]
  3. Key Research & Development Project of Zhejiang Province [41806206]
  4. Fundamental Research Funds for Zhejiang Provincial Universities and Research Institutes [2020C02015]
  5. [2020 J00003]

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This study found that dietary soybean lecithin inclusion can promote the growth and development of yellow drum larvae and improve their intestinal morphology. By increasing fatty acid beta-oxidation and energy production, soybean lecithin can enhance the energy supply to intestinal cells. Meanwhile, feeding on live prey delays body-color transition and increases fecal adhesion in the larvae.
This study aimed to investigate the potential molecular mechanisms through which dietary soybean lecithin inclusion affects the growth, development, and intestinal morphology of yellow drum (Nibea albiflora) larvae. Four types of equal-protein and equal-lipid content microdiets (MDs) were formulated with graded levels of phospholipids (%, dry matter): 3.84 (SL0), 6.71 (SL4), 9.38 (SL8), and 12.21 (SL12). Larvae (25 days posthatching; initial body weight 5.0 mg) were fed four replicates of MDs or Artemia nauplii (live prey) daily for 28 days. We found that dietary soybean lecithin inclusion promoted the growth performance, dorsal fin appearance rate, and body-color transition to juvenile-type in yellow drum larvae. Intestinal histological analysis confirmed that dietary supplementation with soybean lecithin prevented the appearance of vacuoles in enterocytes and increased the goblet cells as well as the perimeter ratio, muscular thickness, and mucosal fold height of the mid-intestinal tissue. Transmission and scanning electron microscopic analyses of the mid-intestine revealed that insufficient soybean lecithin inclusion decreased microvillus density and length and secretory vesicle production. Unique molecular identifier-RNA sequencing revealed that the improvement in intestinal morphology caused by dietary optimal soybean lecithin inclusion could be attributed to increased fatty acid beta-oxidation and subsequent energy production in the intestinal tissue. Compared with the larvae fed with MDs, those fed with live prey experienced body-color transition retardation and a considerable fecal adhesion rate. The significantly decreased expression of genes encoding chemokines could attribute to the high fecal adhesion rate. Collectively, the findings of this study demonstrated the necessity of dietary soybean lecithin for the growth, development, and promotion of mid-intestinal morphology during the N. albiflora larval stage. The promotion of mid-intestinal morphology was likely caused by the resulting increased energy supply to enterocytes. Weaning larvae from live prey to MDs promoted intestinal health and development performance.

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