Literature DB >> 19687276

Intestinal mucin dynamics: response of broiler chicks and White Pekin ducklings to dietary threonine.

N L Horn1, S S Donkin, T J Applegate, O Adeola.   

Abstract

Mucin dynamics may be particularly sensitive to a Thr deficiency due to the high concentration and structural importance of Thr in the mucin protein backbone. Intestinal mucin secretion, expression of mucin gene (MUC2), and histological characteristics were investigated in male broilers and White Pekin ducklings offered diets containing 3.3, 5.8, or 8.2 g of Thr/kg in 4 studies. Seventy-two birds of each species were fed a standard broiler starter diet from 1 to 14 d of age followed by assignment to 3 dietary treatments in a randomized complete block design for a 7-d feeding trial in experiment 1 (broilers) and experiment 2 (ducklings). The dietary treatments consisted of an isonitrogenous corn-soybean meal-based diet with the addition of crystalline amino acids and graded levels of Thr. Dietary treatments contained 3.3, 5.8, or 8.2 g of Thr/kg. Dietary formulation and experimental design for experiments 3 (broilers) and 4 (ducklings) were similar to experiments 1 and 2 except that birds were fed 3.3 or 8.2 g of Thr/kg for durations of 7 or 14 d. For chicks, increased dietary Thr resulted in higher levels of intestinal crude mucin excretion in experiment 1 (P=0.04) but not in experiment 3, whereas intestinal sialic acid excretion increased in experiment 3 (P=0.02) but not in experiment 1. Furthermore, there was no effect of Thr on intestinal goblet cell density or MUC2 mRNA abundance for broilers. For ducklings, there was an increase in intestinal crude mucin excretion in both experiments (P<0.05) as dietary Thr increased, although there was no effect of Thr on intestinal sialic acid excretion. There was a tendency for an increase in intestinal goblet cell density (cells/microm of villus length; P=0.09) as dietary Thr increased in experiment 2. For experiment 4, intestinal MUC2 mRNA abundance increased (P=0.03) as dietary Thr increased for the 14-d feeding trial but not for the 7-d feeding trial. The data establish a link between dietary Thr and intestinal crude mucin dynamics in chicks for experiment 1 and ducklings for both experiments.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19687276     DOI: 10.3382/ps.2009-00009

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Poult Sci        ISSN: 0032-5791            Impact factor:   3.352


  17 in total

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Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2021-06-29       Impact factor: 2.752

4.  Replacing dietary antibiotics with 0.20% l-glutamine and synbiotics following weaning and transport in pigs.

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5.  The Bacillus subtilis and Lactic Acid Bacteria Probiotics Influences Intestinal Mucin Gene Expression, Histomorphology and Growth Performance in Broilers.

Authors:  H R Aliakbarpour; M Chamani; G Rahimi; A A Sadeghi; D Qujeq
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7.  Influence of a specific amino acid pattern in the diet on the course of an experimental Campylobacter jejuni infection in broilers.

Authors:  C Visscher; L Klingenberg; J Hankel; R Brehm; M Langeheine; A Helmbrecht
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Authors:  Michael O Wellington; Kimberley Hamonic; Jack E C Krone; John K Htoo; Andrew G Van Kessel; Daniel A Columbus
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9.  Nutrient density of prestarter diets from 1 to 10 days of age affects intestinal morphometry, enzyme activity, serum indices and performance of broiler chickens.

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10.  Effects of dietary threonine supplementation on productivity and expression of genes related to protein deposition and amino acid transportation in breeder hens of yellow-feathered chicken and their offspring.

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Journal:  Poult Sci       Date:  2019-12-01       Impact factor: 4.014

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