4.7 Article

Protective effects of taurine against muscle damage induced by diquat in 35 days weaned piglets

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s40104-020-00463-0

Keywords

Mitochondrial morphology; Oxidative stress; Piglets; Skeletal muscle; Taurine

Funding

  1. National Key RD Program [2018YFD0500405]
  2. National Nature Science Foundation of China [31972582]
  3. Science and technology projects of Changsha City [kq1801059]
  4. STS regional key projects of Chinese Academy of Sciences [KFJ-STS-QYZD-052]
  5. Youth Innovation Team Project of ISA, CAS [2017QNCXTD_ZCS]
  6. Earmarked Fund for China Agriculture Research System [CARS-35]

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Background Oxidative stress is a key factor that influences piglets' health. Taurine plays an imperative role in keeping the biological system from damage. This study was conducted to investigate the protective effect of taurine against muscle injury due to the secondary effect of diquat toxicity. Results Our study found that taurine effectively and dose-dependently alleviated the diquat toxicity induced rise of feed/gain, with a concurrent improvement of carcass lean percentage. The plasma content of taurine was considerably increased in a dose-dependent manner. Consequently, dietary taurine efficiently improved the activity of plasma antioxidant enzymes. Furthermore, taurine attenuated muscle damage by restoring mitochondrial micromorphology, suppressing protein degradation and reducing the percentage of apoptotic cells in the skeletal muscle. Taurine supplementation also suppressed the genes expression levels of the antioxidant-, mitochondrial biogenesis-, and muscle atrophy-related genes in the skeletal muscle of piglets with oxidative stress. Conclusions These results showed that the dose of 0.60% taurine supplementation in the diet could attenuate skeletal muscle injury induced by diquat toxicity. It is suggested that taurine could be a potential nutritional intervention strategy to improve growth performance.

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