4.2 Article

Effects of rapeseed meal-glucosinolates on thyroid metabolism and feed utilization in rainbow trout

Journal

GENERAL AND COMPARATIVE ENDOCRINOLOGY
Volume 124, Issue 3, Pages 343-358

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1006/gcen.2001.7723

Keywords

rapeseed; glucosinolates; growth; thyroid function; deiodinase activity; TSH; iodine; rainbow trout

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Two rapeseed meals (RM1 and RM2), containing glucosinolates at a concentration of 26 and 40 mumol/g, respectively, were incorporated at increasing levels (10, 20, and 30% for RM1 and 30 and 50% for RM2) in diets of juvenile rainbow trout. Disturbances in the thyroid axis appeared after 14 days of feeding (with a dietary incorporation level of 10%). The dietary supplementation with T-3 or iodine induced an increase in plasma T-3 levels, compared to that in fish fed the RM diets, and reduced the deleterious effect of RM on growth. When trout were reared in seawater, there was also a slight increase in thyroid hormone levels. TSH treatment had no effect on the thyroid hormone plasma levels. The incorporation of 30% of RM1, which induced a lower dietary content of toxic compounds than RM2, led to a rapid decrease of plasma T-4 and T-3 levels, but growth was affected only after 6 months of feeding. During these studies, the deiodinase activities responded in a complex manner to restore plasma and tissue levels of T-3. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science.

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