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Growth, Feed Utilization and Blood Metabolic Responses to Different Amylose-amylopectin Ratio Fed Diets in Tilapia ( Oreochromis niloticus )

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TLDR
The results indicate that high-dietary amylose-amylopectin ratio could compromise growth, but help in reducing the blood glucose stress on fish caused by postprandial starch load.
Abstract
A feeding trial was conducted in tilapia to determine the growth performance, nutrient digestibility, digestive enzymes, and postprandial blood metabolites in response to different dietary amylose-amylopectin ratios. Five isonitrogenous and isolipidic diets containing an equal starch level with different amylose-amylopectin ratios of 0.11 (diet 1), 0.24 (diet 2), 0.47 (diet 3), 0.76 (diet 4) and 0.98 (diet 5) were formulated using high-amylose corn starch (as the amylose source) and waxy rice (as the amylopectin source). Each diet was hand-fed to six tanks of 15 fish each, three times a day over a 6-wk period. After the growth trial, a postprandial blood metabolic test was carried out. Fish fed diet 2 exhibited the highest percent weight gain and feed efficiency and protein efficiency ratio, whereas fish fed with diet 5 showed the lowest growth and feed utilization among treatments. The digestibility for starch in fish fed diet 1 and 2 was higher than those in fish fed with other diets (p<0.05). The highest activities for protease, lipase and amylase were found in fish fed the diet 2, diet 1, and diet 1 respectively among dietary treatments, while the lowest values for these indexes were observed in fish fed the diet 3, diet 5 and diet 4, respectively. The liver glycogen concentrations in fish fed diets 4 and 5 were found higher than in fish fed other diets (p<0.05). The feeding rate, hepatosomatic index, condition factor, and plasma parmeters (glucose, triglyceride, total cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol) did not differ across treatments. In terms of postprandial blood responses, peak blood glucose and triglycerides were lower after 3 or 6 h in the fish fed with diets 3-5 than in the fish fed diet 1, but delayed peak blood total amino acid time was observed in fish fed with the diets 1 or 2. The lowest peak values for each of the three blood metabolites were observed in fish fed diet 5. The results indicate that high-dietary amylose-amylopectin ratio could

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The Use of Dietary Additives in Fish Stress Mitigation: Comparative Endocrine and Physiological Responses

TL;DR: The different physiological responses among fish species fed stress-attenuating diets based on biomolecules and minerals have been assessed, focusing on the endocrine regulation and its physiological effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular responses of Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus) to different levels of dietary carbohydrates

TL;DR: The study confirmed that Nile tilapia can use high level of carbohydrates without any deregulation of glucose homeostasis and suggested that these metabolic pathways at a molecular level are not the main actors explaining the efficient use of glucose intilapia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of dietary carbohydrate sources on growth performance, glycogen accumulation, insulin signaling pathway and hepatic glucose metabolism in largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides

TL;DR: Results showed that pea starch significantly improved the specific growth rate (SGR), daily weight gain (DWG) and net fish yield (NFY) of largemouth bass compared to other starch, which maybe related to the depressed feed conversion ratio (FCR).
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth performance, body composition, and digestive functionality of Senegalese sole (Solea senegalensis Kaup, 1858) juveniles fed diets including microalgae freeze-dried biomass

TL;DR: The results obtained clearly suggest the potential of microalgae as dietary ingredients for this fish species, and the dietary inclusion of algal biomass, especially T. lutea and N. gaditana, had a positive impact on the absorptive capacity of the intestinal mucosa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of starch sources on growth, hepatic glucose metabolism and antioxidant capacity in juvenile largemouth bass, Micropterus salmoides

TL;DR: It is suggested that the starch types may affect growth performance and metabolic changes, whereas the pea starch and high-amylose maize starch were the most optimal carbohydrate sources for juvenile M. salmoides.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Association of Official Analytical Chemists

TL;DR: In this paper, the Association of Official Analytical Chemists (AOA) published a survey of the state-of-the-art methods and their application in clinical toxicology, including the following:
Journal ArticleDOI

Molecules to Granules: A Comprehensive Starch Review

Henry F. Zobel
- 01 Jan 1988 - 
TL;DR: The molecular composition and physical aspects of starch structure are examined in relation to starch properties and utility in this paper, and the structures and molecular properties of amylose and amylopectin are further considered for their effects on properties of starch granules and pastes, and whether or not they act independently or in concert with one another.
Journal ArticleDOI

Utilization of dietary carbohydrate by fish

TL;DR: Recent studies have shown that insulin levels in fish are similar to or often higher than those observed in mammals, thus indicating that fish are not diabetic as previously thought.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbohydrates in fish nutrition: effects on growth, glucose metabolism and hepatic enzymes

TL;DR: The focus then shifts to selected aspects of hormonal regulation of carbohydrate metabolism and dietary carbohydrates and their variable effects on glycogen and glucose turnover, and the correlation of dietary carbohydrates with fish health.
Journal ArticleDOI

Carbohydrates in fish nutrition: digestion and absorption in postlarval stages

TL;DR: This review summarizes information regarding digestion and absorption of carbohydrates in cultivated fish and reports results of studies of digestive enzymes, e.g. amylase, chitinase, cellulase and brush border disaccharidases, which appear to be molecularly closely related and to have characteristics comparable to mammalian amylases.
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