Ismael Shehata, Akram and A. Shahin, Shimaa and M. Elmaghraby, Ayaat and Alhoshy, Mayada and A. Soliman, Ali and A. Amer, Asem and Jibril Habib, Yusuf and S. Gewaily, Mahmoud and F. El Basuini, Mohammed (2024) Synergistic benefits of dietary silymarin and selenium on growth, immune functions, antioxidants, and gut/liver health of Thinlip mullet (Liza ramada) juveniles. ANNALS OF ANIMAL SCIENCE. ISSN 2300-8733
Text (Research Article)
Synergistic-benefits-of-dietary-silymarin-and-selenium-on-growth-immune-functions-antioxidants-and-gutliver-health-of-Thinlip-mullet-juveniles.pdf - Published Version Download (1MB) |
Abstract
This study investigates the synergistic impact of silymarin (SI) levels combined with inorganic selenium (sodium selenite: Se) on growth, feed utilization, biochemical parameters, antioxidants, innate immunity, intestinal and liver histology, and gene expression of Thinlip mullet (Liza ramada) juveniles. The experimental design involved thinlip mullets initially weighing 3.5±0.13 g, distributed in a completely randomized design with 30 fish per hapa (0.5 × 0.5 × 1 m), and conducted in triplicate over 60 days. Seven experimental diets were employed, including a control (without SI and Se supplementation), a negative control (with only Se supplementation), and four treatments with varying levels of silymarin (250, 450, 650, 850 mg/kg) alongside selenium (0.5 mg/kg diet). The growth performance results highlighted significant enhancements in final body weight, weight gain, and specific growth rate, particularly in the SI 850 mg/kg + Se treatment. Survival rates, feed intake, and feed conversion ratios showed positive trends across the SI-Se supplemented groups. Biochemical profiles of serum exhibited that the control diet-induced elevated concentrations of glucose, cholesterol, Alanine aminotransferase, Aspartate aminotransferase, and urea, while Se or SI supplementation significantly mitigated these levels, with the lowest concentrations observed in the SI-Se supplemented groups. Moreover, SI supplementation increased serum protein content. Antioxidant enzyme activities, represented by superoxide dismutase (SOD), catalase (CAT), and catalase (GPx), demonstrated notable improvements in the SI-Se fortified groups, with significantly elevated GPx activity compared to the Se-supplemented and control groups. Immune system responses, including lysozyme, bactericidal, Nitro-blue Tetrazolium (NBT%), and serum alternative complement pathway (ACH50) activities, were highest in the SI-Se augmented groups. SI and Se in L. ramada reduce liver pro-inflammatory gene expression (il-1β, hepcidin) vs. control group. Histological examinations of the intestine and liver depicted structural enhancements, especially at moderate and high levels of SI with Se supplementation. The results indicate improved intestinal villi morphology and hepatic architecture, supporting the positive influence of dietary treatments on the health of thinlip mullet juveniles. In conclusion, the combined supplementation of SI at 850 mg/kg diet and Se at 0.5 mg/kg diet positively influenced the growth, biochemical profiles, antioxidant status, immune responses, gene expression, and histological integrity of Thinlip mullet juveniles, providing valuable insights for optimizing aquafeed formulations.
Item Type: | Article |
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Uncontrolled Keywords: | bioactive supplementation, growth augmentation, immunity, Hepcidin gene, Interleukin 1-β gene, histological brilliance, Liza ramada |
Subjects: | Q Science > Q Science (General) Q Science > QD Chemistry Q Science > QK Botany R Medicine > R Medicine (General) R Medicine > RA Public aspects of medicine R Medicine > RV Botanic, Thomsonian, and eclectic medicine |
Depositing User: | ePrints deposit |
Date Deposited: | 27 Aug 2024 13:23 |
Last Modified: | 27 Aug 2024 13:23 |
URI: | http://eprints.tiu.edu.iq/id/eprint/1514 |
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