4.7 Article

Evaluation of Nannochloropsis gaditana raw and hydrolysed biomass at low inclusion level as dietary functional additive for gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) juveniles

Journal

AQUACULTURE
Volume 556, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.aquaculture.2022.738288

Keywords

Bioactive compounds; Cellulase; Functional additive; Lipid oxidation; Microalgae hydrolysis

Funding

  1. MCIU-FEDER [RTI2018-096625-B-C33, RTI2018-096625-B-C31]
  2. SABANA project (the European Union's Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation program) [727874]
  3. MCIN/AEI [PCI2020-112204]
  4. EU NextGener-ationEU/PRTR within the ERA-NET BioBlue COFUND)
  5. [EQC2018-004984-P]
  6. [EQC2019-006380-P]

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Abundant research has been conducted to explore microalgal biomass as a nutrient source for aquacultured fish. Cellulase enzyme hydrolysis is proposed as a solution to improve the bioavailability of intracellular active compounds in microalgae species like Nannochloropsis gaditana. Adding N. gaditana biomass to fish feeds has positive effects on parameters such as digestive mucosa structure and functionality, oxidative status of muscle lipids, and instrumental colour.
Abundant research is being carried out in the last years aimed at exploring microalgal biomass as nutrient source for different species of aquacultured fish. Some microalgae species, such as Nannochloropsis gaditana, have thick cell walls rich in cellulose, which might well reduce the bioavailability of intracellular active compounds. Among the alternatives aimed at overcoming this limitation, cellulase enzyme hydrolysis is proposed as a convenient and practical solution. In this regard, an in vitro assay was carried out, in which N. gaditana biomass was treated with cellulase (5% w/w basis) and the release of soluble compounds (reducing sugars, free amino acids and total phenolics) into the reaction medium was measured and compared to untreated raw biomass. The results confirmed increased yields of those compounds as a result of the enzyme pre-treatment. A 90-d feeding trial was also carried out in order to assess in vivo the influence of the inclusion of N. gaditana in feeds on juvenile gilthead seabream (Sparus aurata) growth, digestive physiology and body composition. Microalgal biomass was added at two inclusion levels (25 and 50 g kg-1 dry weight) in four experimental feeds, either crude or enzymatically pretreated. Animals (15.1 g initial body weight) were randomly assigned to five dietary treatments (two inclusion levels, 2.5 and 5%, and two microalgae formats, raw and enzymatically hydrolysed, plus a microalgae-free control), and distributed triplicate tanks per dietary treatment. Fish were withdrawn after 45 and 90 days, and proximate composition, muscle fatty acid and amino acid profiles, muscle and liver lipid oxidation, instrumental skin colour, digestive enzyme activities, as well as structural and ultrastructural changes in the intestinal mucosa were determined. No differences attributable to the dietary treatments were found with regard to fish growth or proximate composition at the end of the feeding trial. On the contrary, the inclusion of microalgal biomass, irrespectively of the cellulase pre-treatment, caused beneficial effects on some physiological parameters (namely digestive mucosa structure and functionality, oxidative status of muscle lipids, and instrumental colour). The only clear improvement found in fish attributable to the cellulase pre-treatment of the microalgal biomass was related to the prevention of muscle lipid oxidation. Overall, the results suggest that N. gaditana used as additive (at inclusion level below 5%) in feeds might represent a valuable nutritional strategy for S. aurata juveniles, even if growth was not affected.

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