Fish Pathology Group, Instituto de Acuicultura Torre de la Sal (IATS-CSIC), Castellón, Spain.
Nutrigenomics and Fish Growth Endocrinology Group, Instituto de Acuicultura Torre de la Sal (IATS-CSIC), Castellón, Spain.
Microbiome. 2017 Dec 28;5(1):164. doi: 10.1186/s40168-017-0390-3.
The constant increase of aquaculture production and wealthy seafood consumption has forced the industry to explore alternative and more sustainable raw aquafeed materials, and plant ingredients have been used to replace marine feedstuffs in many farmed fish. The objective of the present study was to assess whether plant-based diets can induce changes in the intestinal mucus proteome, gut autochthonous microbiota and disease susceptibility of fish, and whether these changes could be reversed by the addition of sodium butyrate to the diets. Three different trials were performed using the teleostean gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata) as model. In a first preliminary short-term trial, fish were fed with the additive (0.8%) supplementing a basal diet with low vegetable inclusion (D1) and then challenged with a bacteria to detect possible effects on survival. In a second trial, fish were fed with diets with greater vegetable inclusion levels (D2, D3) and the long-term effect of sodium butyrate at a lower dose (0.4%) added to D3 (D4 diet) was tested on the intestinal proteome and microbiome. In a third trial, the long-term effectiveness of sodium butyrate (D4) to prevent disease outcome after an intestinal parasite (Enteromyxum leei) challenge was tested.
The results showed that opposed forces were driven by dietary plant ingredients and sodium butyrate supplementation in fish diet. On the one hand, vegetable diets induced high parasite infection levels that provoked drops in growth performance, decreased intestinal microbiota diversity, induced the dominance of the Photobacterium genus, as well as altered the gut mucosal proteome suggesting detrimental effects on intestinal function. On the other hand, butyrate addition slightly decreased cumulative mortality after bacterial challenge, avoided growth retardation in parasitized fish, increased intestinal microbiota diversity with a higher representation of butyrate-producing bacteria and reversed most vegetable diet-induced changes in the gut proteome.
This integrative work gives insights on the pleiotropic effects of a dietary additive on the restoration of intestinal homeostasis and disease resilience, using a multifaceted approach.
水产养殖产量的不断增加和海鲜消费的增加,迫使该行业探索替代和更可持续的原料水产养殖饲料,许多养殖鱼类已将植物成分用于替代海洋饲料。本研究的目的是评估植物性饮食是否会引起鱼类肠道粘液蛋白质组、肠道原籍微生物群和疾病易感性的变化,以及这些变化是否可以通过在饮食中添加丁酸钠来逆转。使用鲈形目真鲷(Sparus aurata)作为模型进行了三项不同的试验。在第一个初步的短期试验中,鱼用添加剂(0.8%)喂养,该添加剂补充了低蔬菜含量的基础饮食(D1),然后用细菌进行挑战,以检测对存活率的可能影响。在第二个试验中,鱼用含有更高蔬菜含量水平的饮食(D2、D3)喂养,并测试了低剂量(0.4%)的丁酸钠添加到 D3(D4 饮食)对肠道蛋白质组和微生物组的长期影响。在第三个试验中,测试了丁酸钠(D4)在肠道寄生虫(Enteromyxum leei)挑战后预防疾病结果的长期有效性。
结果表明,饮食中的植物成分和丁酸钠补充剂在鱼类饮食中产生了相反的力量。一方面,蔬菜饮食会引起寄生虫感染水平升高,导致生长性能下降,肠道微生物多样性降低,Photobacterium 属占主导地位,以及肠道粘膜蛋白质组发生变化,表明对肠道功能有不利影响。另一方面,丁酸钠的添加略微降低了细菌挑战后的累积死亡率,避免了寄生虫感染鱼类的生长迟缓,增加了肠道微生物多样性,产生丁酸的细菌比例更高,并逆转了肠道蛋白质组中大多数蔬菜饮食引起的变化。
这项综合工作通过多方面的方法,深入了解了饮食添加剂对肠道内稳态和疾病恢复能力的多效性影响。