Birkl Patrick, Chow Jacqueline, Forsythe Paul, Gostner Johanna M, Kjaer Joergen B, Kunze Wolfgang A, McBride Peter, Fuchs Dietmar, Harlander-Matauschek Alexandra
Department of Animal Biosciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON, Canada.
Department of Medicine, Brain-Body Institute and Firestone Institute for Respiratory Health, McMaster University, Hamilton, ON, Canada.
Front Vet Sci. 2019 Jun 27;6:209. doi: 10.3389/fvets.2019.00209. eCollection 2019.
Research into the role of tryptophan (TRP) breakdown away from the serotonergic to the kynurenine (KYN) pathway by stimulating the brain-endocrine-immune axis system interaction has brought new insight into potential etiologies of certain human behavioral and mental disorders. TRP is involved in inappropriate social interactions, such as feather-destructive pecking behavior (FP) in birds selected for egg laying. Therefore, our goal was to determine the effect of social disruption stress on FP and the metabolism of the amino acids TRP, phenylalanine (PHE), tyrosine (TYR), their relevant ratios, and on large neutral amino acids which are competitors with regard to their transport across the blood-brain barriers, at least in the human system, in adolescent birds selected for and against FP behavior. We used 160 laying hens selected for high (HFP) or low (LFP) FP activity and an unselected control line (UC). Ten pens with 16 individuals each (4 HFP birds; 3 LFP birds; 9 UC birds) were used. At 16 weeks of age, we disrupted the groups twice in 5 pens by mixing individuals with unfamiliar birds to induce social stress. Blood plasma was collected before and after social disruption treatments, to measure amino acid concentrations. Birds FP behavior was recorded before and after social disruption treatments. HFP birds performed significantly more FP and had lower KYN/TRP ratios. We detected significantly higher FP activity and significantly lower plasma PHE/TYR ratios and a trend to lower KYN/TRP ratios in socially disrupted compared to control pens. This might indicate that activating insults for TRP catabolism along the KYN axis in laying hens differs compared to humans and points toward the need for a more detailed analysis of regulatory mechanisms to understand the role of TRP metabolism for laying hen immune system and brain function.
通过刺激脑-内分泌-免疫轴系统相互作用,对色氨酸(TRP)从血清素能途径转向犬尿氨酸(KYN)途径的分解作用进行研究,为某些人类行为和精神障碍的潜在病因带来了新的见解。TRP参与了不适当的社会互动,例如在选作产蛋的鸟类中出现的啄羽破坏行为(FP)。因此,我们的目标是确定社会扰乱应激对FP以及氨基酸TRP、苯丙氨酸(PHE)、酪氨酸(TYR)的代谢、它们的相关比率,以及对至少在人类系统中作为跨血脑屏障转运竞争物的大中性氨基酸的影响,研究对象为选作具有或不具有FP行为的青春期鸟类。我们使用了160只选作高FP活动(HFP)或低FP活动(LFP)的产蛋母鸡以及一个未选的对照品系(UC)。使用了10个围栏,每个围栏有16只个体(4只HFP鸟类;3只LFP鸟类;9只UC鸟类)。在16周龄时,我们通过将个体与不熟悉的鸟类混合,在5个围栏中对这些组进行了两次扰乱,以诱导社会应激。在社会扰乱处理前后采集血浆以测量氨基酸浓度。在社会扰乱处理前后记录鸟类的FP行为。HFP鸟类表现出显著更多的FP行为,并且具有更低的KYN/TRP比率。与对照围栏相比,我们检测到在社会扰乱的围栏中FP活动显著更高,血浆PHE/TYR比率显著更低,并且有KYN/TRP比率降低的趋势。这可能表明,与人类相比,产蛋母鸡中沿KYN轴激活TRP分解代谢的刺激因素有所不同,这表明需要对调节机制进行更详细的分析,以了解TRP代谢对产蛋母鸡免疫系统和脑功能的作用。