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Book ChapterDOI

Nutrition and Functions of Amino Acids in Fish.

TLDR
In this paper, the digestibility and bioavailability of AAs should be carefully evaluated because feed production processes and AA degradation in the gut affect the amounts of dietary AAs that enter the blood circulation.
Abstract
Aquaculture is increasingly important for providing humans with high-quality animal protein to improve growth, development and health. Farm-raised fish and shellfish now exceed captured fisheries for foods. More than 70% of the production cost is dependent on the supply of compound feeds. A public debate or concern over aquaculture is its environmental sustainability as many fish species have high requirements for dietary protein and fishmeal. Protein or amino acids (AAs), which are the major component of tissue growth, are generally the most expensive nutrients in animal production and, therefore, are crucial for aquatic feed development. There is compelling evidence that an adequate supply of both traditionally classified nutritionally essential amino acids (EAAs) and non-essential amino acids (NEAAs) in diets improve the growth, development and production performance of aquatic animals (e.g., larval metamorphosis). The processes for the utilization of dietary AAs or protein utilization by animals include digestion, absorption and metabolism. The digestibility and bioavailability of AAs should be carefully evaluated because feed production processes and AA degradation in the gut affect the amounts of dietary AAs that enter the blood circulation. Absorbed AAs are utilized for the syntheses of protein, peptides, AAs, and other metabolites (including nucleotides); biological oxidation and ATP production; gluconeogenesis and lipogenesis; and the regulation of acid-base balance, anti-oxidative reactions, and immune responses. Fish producers usually focus on the content or digestibility of dietary crude protein without considering the supply of AAs in the diet. In experiments involving dietary supplementation with AAs, inappropriate AAs (e.g., glycine and glutamate) are often used as the isonitrogenous control. At present, limited knowledge is available about either the cell- and tissue-specific metabolism of AAs or the effects of feed processing methods on the digestion and utilization of AAs in different fish species. These issues should be addressed to develop environment-friendly aquafeeds and reduce feed costs to sustain the global aquaculture.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Nutrition and Metabolism: Foundations for Animal Growth, Development, Reproduction, and Health.

TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss how to mitigate antimicrobial resistance and develop prebiotic and probiotic alternatives to in-feed antibiotics in animal production, while helping reduce greenhouse gas emissions, minimize the urinary and fecal excretion of nitrogenous and other wastes to the environment, and sustain animal agriculture (including aquaculture).
Book ChapterDOI

Nutrition and Functions of Amino Acids in Aquatic Crustaceans.

TL;DR: A review of amino acid metabolism in aquatic crustacean species at different life stages can be found in this article, where the authors highlight recent advances in AA nutrition and metabolism for optimum growth, health and wellbeing of crustaceans.
Book ChapterDOI

Composition of Amino Acids in Foodstuffs for Humans and Animals.

TL;DR: Amino acids (AAs) are the building blocks of proteins that have both structural and metabolic functions in humans and other animals as mentioned in this paper, and proteinogenic AAs are alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartate, cysteine, glutamate, glutamine, glycine, histidine, isoleucine, leucine and lysine, methionine, phenylalanine.
Journal ArticleDOI

Hydroxyproline in animal metabolism, nutrition, and cell signaling

TL;DR: Trans-4-hydroxy-l-proline is highly abundant in collagen (accounting for about one-third of body proteins in humans and other animals) and has both structural and physiological significance in animals.
Journal ArticleDOI

Protein-Sourced Feedstuffs for Aquatic Animals in Nutrition Research and Aquaculture.

TL;DR: Aquatic animals have particularly high requirements for dietary amino acids (AAs) for health, survival, growth, development, and reproduction, and therefore are the determinants of the growth performance and feed efficiency of farmed fish as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Compartmental distribution of free amino acids and protein in developing yolk-sac larvae of Atlantic halibut (Hippoglossus hippoglossus)

TL;DR: Data suggest that in the early yolk-sac stage FAA enter the embryo from the yolk and are utilised both for energy and protein synthesis, and later on when the free pool cannot fulfil the nutritional requirements, additional amino acids are recruited from yolk protein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of Elevated Dietary Arginine on Resistance of Channel Catfish to Exposure to Edwardsiella ictaluri

TL;DR: The effects of elevated dietary arginine on infection resistance to Edwardsiella ictaluri by juvenile channel catfish Ictalurus punctatus was assessed to investigate the effects of amino acid form (crystalline free amino acids versus intact protein).
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of dietary glutamine on growth performance, non-specific immunity, expression of cytokine genes, phosphorylation of target of rapamycin (TOR), and anti-oxidative system in spleen and head kidney of Jian carp (Cyprinus carpio var. Jian)

TL;DR: The importance of dietary supplementation of glutamine in benefaction of the growth performance and several components of the innate immune system, and the deferential role in cytokine gene expression, TOR kinase activity, and antioxidant status between the spleen and head kidney of juvenile Jian carp are shown.
Journal ArticleDOI

Stability of the allergenic soybean Kunitz trypsin inhibitor.

TL;DR: Spectroscopic and biochemical techniques used to study the molecular structure of soybean Kunitz trypsin inhibitor revealed that under acid denaturing conditions, SKTI shows major changes in conformation, indicating the possibility of a molten structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nutrition and metabolism of glutamate and glutamine in fish

TL;DR: Dietary supplementation with Glu and Gln to farmed fish can improve their growth performance, intestinal development, innate and adaptive immune responses, skeletal muscle development and fillet quality, ammonia removal, and the endocrine status.
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Trending Questions (1)
What are the effects of weaning on amino acids metabolites in fish?

The effects of weaning on amino acid metabolites in fish are not mentioned in the provided paper. The paper discusses the importance of amino acids in fish nutrition and the processes involved in their utilization.