| Literature DB >> 26104400 |
Hongqin Jiang, Zhenzhen Wang, Yong Ma, Yanghua Qu, Xiaonan Lu, Hailing Luo.
Abstract
Lycopene, a red non-provitamin A carotenoid, mainly presenting in tomato and tomato byproducts, has the highest antioxidant activity among carotenoids because of its high number of conjugated double bonds. The objective of this study was to investigate the effect of lycopene supplementation in the diet on plasma lipid profile, lipid peroxidation and antioxidant defense system in feedlot lamb. Twenty-eight Bamei male lambs (90 days old) were divided into four groups and fed a basal diet (LP0, 40:60 roughage: concentrate) or the basal diet supplemented with 50, 100, and 200 mg/kg lycopene. After 120 days of feeding, all lambs were slaughtered and sampled. Dietary lycopene supplementation significantly reduced the levels of plasma total cholesterol (p<0.05, linearly), total triglycerides (TG, p<0.05) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C, p<0.05), as well as atherogenic index (p<0.001), whereas no change was observed in high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (p>0.05). The levels of TG (p<0.001) and LDL-C (p<0.001) were decreased with the feeding time extension, and both showed a linear trend (p<0.01). Malondialdehyde level in plasma and liver decreased linearly with the increase of lycopene inclusion levels (p<0.01). Dietary lycopene intake linearly increased the plasma antioxidant vitamin E level (p<0.001), total antioxidant capacity (T-AOC, p<0.05), and activities of catalase (CAT, p<0.01), glutathione peroxidase (GSH-Px, p<0.05) and superoxide dismutase (SOD, p<0.05). The plasma T-AOC and activities of GSH-Px and SOD decreased with the extension of the feeding time. In liver, dietary lycopene inclusion showed similar antioxidant effects with respect to activities of CAT (p<0.05, linearly) and SOD (p<0.001, linearly). Therefore, it was concluded that lycopene supplementation improved the antioxidant status of the lamb and optimized the plasma lipid profile, the dosage of 200 mg lycopene/kg feed might be desirable for growing lambs to prevent environment stress and maintain normal physiological metabolism.Entities:
Keywords: Antioxidant Enzymes; Lamb; Lipid Profile; Lycopene; Malondialdehyde; Plasma
Year: 2015 PMID: 26104400 PMCID: PMC4478505 DOI: 10.5713/ajas.14.0887
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian-Australas J Anim Sci ISSN: 1011-2367 Impact factor: 2.509
Ingredients and chemical composition of the basal diet fed to the lambs1
| Items | Basal diet |
|---|---|
| Ingredients (%, as fed basis) | |
| Chinese wildrye grass hay, ground | 32 |
| Alfalfa hay, ground | 8 |
| Corn | 34 |
| Soybean meal | 8.9 |
| Dried distilled grain solubles | 9.0 |
| Wheat bran | 5.5 |
| Salt | 0.5 |
| Limestone | 0.3 |
| Dicalcium phosphate | 0.5 |
| Sodium bicarbonate | 0.3 |
| Minerals and vitamin premix | 1.0 |
| Chemical composition (%, as-fed basis) | |
| Dry matter | 91.7 |
| Gross energy (MJ/kg) | 15.98 |
| Crude protein | 13.93 |
| Crude fat | 2.51 |
| Neutral detergent fiber | 35.98 |
| Acid detergent fiber | 17.89 |
Experimental diets were supplemented with 0, 50, 100, and 200 mg lycopene/1 kg basal diet.
Per kilogram of diet: 23 mg Fe, 28 mg Zn, 17 mg Mn, 6 mg Cu, 0.04 mg I, 0.2 mg Se, 0.1 mg Co, 3,700 IU vitamin A, 1,000 mg vitamin D3, 60 IU vitamin E.
Effects of varying levels of dietary lycopene supplementation and sampling time on plasma lipid profile in feedlot sheep
| TC (mmol/L) | TG (mmol/L) | HDL-C (mmol/L) | LDL-C (mmol/L) | AI | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| LP | |||||
| LP0 | 1.68±0.09 | 0.64±0.02 | 0.59±0.03 | 0.61±0.04 | 2.00±0.20 |
| LP50 | 1.36±0.06 | 0.60±0.01 | 0.61±0.03 | 0.51±0.04 | 1.27±0.07 |
| LP100 | 1.44±0.06 | 0.61±0.01 | 0.65±0.04 | 0.51±0.03 | 1.24±0.08 |
| LP200 | 1.39±0.04 | 0.59±0.01 | 0.66±0.03 | 0.48±0.04 | 1.16±0.11 |
| Time | |||||
| Day 30 | 1.49±0.07 | 0.66±0.02 | 0.67±0.02 | 0.63±0.03 | 1.27±0.14 |
| Day 60 | 1.36±0.07 | 0.60±0.01 | 0.58±.03 | 0.56±0.03 | 1.46±0.16 |
| Day 90 | 1.42±0.08 | 0.57±0.01 | 0.60±.04 | 0.45±0.04 | 1.42±0.13 |
| Day 120 | 1.61±0.09 | 0.59±0.01 | 0.65±0.04 | 0.46±0.03 | 1.54±0.15 |
| Statistical significance | |||||
| LP | NS | ||||
| Time | NS | NS | NS | ||
| LP×time | NS | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Linear | |||||
| LP | NS | NS | NS | NS | |
| Time | NS | NS | NS | ||
TC, total cholesterol; TG, total triglyceride; HDL-C, high density lipoprotein-cholesterol; LDL-C, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol; AI, atherogenic index ; LP, lycopene; NS, not significant.
AI = (TC-HDL)/HDL.
LP0, no LP; LP50, 50 mg LP/kg feed; LP100, 100 mg LP/kg feed; LP200, 200 mg LP/kg feed.
Time means sampling time at day 30, 60, 90, and 120 of feeding.
Means with different small letters within LP or time in the same column are significantly different (p<0.05).
p<0.05;
p<0.01;
p<0.001.
Effect of varying levels of dietary lycopene on plasma and liver malondialdehyde (MDA) levels in feedlot sheep
| Items | MDA | |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Plasma (nmol/mL) | Liver (nmol/mg protein) | |
| Treatment | ||
| LP0 | 3.83±0.32 | 2.91±0.33 |
| LP50 | 2.45±0.19 | 2.70±0.32 |
| LP100 | 2.59±0.15 | 1.81±0.14 |
| LP200 | 2.68±0.22 | 1. 48±0.14 |
| p-value | ||
| Linear | ||
| Time | ||
| Day 30 | 2.05±0.13 | |
| Day 60 | 3.38±0.34 | |
| Day 90 | 2.93± 0.26 | |
| Day 120 | 3.21±0.14 | |
| p-value | ||
| Linear | ||
LP, lycopene.
LP0, no LP; LP50, 50 mg LP/kg feed; LP100, 100 mg LP/kg feed; LP200, 200 mg LP/kg feed.
Time means sampling time at day 30, 60, 90 and 120 of feeding.
Means with different small letters in the same row are significantly different (p<0.05).
p<0.05;
p<0.01;
p<0.001.
Figure 1Effect of different dietary lycopene levels on plasma vitamin A and vitamin E levels in feedlot Bamei sheep. Values with different letters are highly significantly different (p<0.01). Vertical bars are standard deviations. LP, lycopene; LP0 = No LP; LP50, 50 mg LP/kg feed; LP100, 100 mg LP/kg feed; LP200, 200 mg LP/kg feed.
Effects of varying levels of dietary lycopene and sampling time on plasma T-AOC and antioxidant enzymes activities in sheep
| T-AOC | CAT | GSH-Px | SOD | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LP | ||||
| LP0 | 17.87±0.68 | 9.51±0.49 | 131.12±7.97 | 68.13±5.58 |
| LP50 | 19.40±0.86 | 10.70±0.64 | 154.19±7.31 | 81.89±4.41 |
| LP100 | 20.53±1.14 | 12.25±0.51 | 158.25±9.84 | 85.16±5.34 |
| LP200 | 20.71±1.15 | 12.04±0.69 | 180.02±12.72 | 84.91±5.40 |
| Time3 | ||||
| Day 30 | 22.42±0.80 | 11.47±0.68 | 180.85±13.31 | 91.74±2.29 |
| Day 60 | 20.42±1.07 | 11.21±0.54 | 154.02±8.15 | 88.77±4.20 |
| Day 90 | 18.17±1.05 | 10.64±0.41 | 133.37±9.71 | 81.29±4.44 |
| Day 120 | 17.50±0.63 | 11.06±0.76 | 155.34±6.44 | 58.29±6.31 |
| Statistical significance | ||||
| LP | NS | |||
| Time | NS | |||
| LP×time | NS | NS | NS | NS |
| Linear | ||||
| LP | ||||
| Time | NS | NS | ||
T-AOC, total antioxidant capacity; CAT, catalase; GSH-Px, glutathione peroxidase; SOD, superoxide dismutase; LP, lycopene; NS, not significant.
LP0, no LP; LP50, 50 mg LP/kg feed; LP100, 100 mg LP/kg feed; LP200, 200 mg LP/kg feed.
Time means sampling time at day 30, 60, 90, and 120 of feeding.
Means with different small letters within LP or Time in the same column are significantly different (p<0.05).
p<0.05;
p<0.01;
p<0.001.
Effect of varying levels of dietary lycopene on liver T-AOC and antioxidant enzymes activities (nmol/mg protein) in feedlot sheep
| Variables | Treatment | p value | Linear | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| LP0 | LP50 | LP100 | LP200 | |||
| T-AOC | 1.48±0.31 | 1.37±0.10 | 1.56±0.07 | 1.77±0.13 | NS | NS |
| CAT | 62.09±2.56 | 70.72±4.92 | 73.37±3.82 | 75.89±3.56 | NS | |
| GSH-Px | 336.12±25.19 | 338.29±33.26 | 350.08±12.64 | 345.74±20.13 | NS | NS |
| SOD | 40.47±0.62 | 40.16±2.38 | 48.13±1.79 | 54.86±3.76 | ||
LP, lycopene; T-AOC, total antioxidant capacity; NS, not significant; CAT, catalase; GSH-Px, glutathione peroxidase; SOD, superoxide dismutase.
LP0, no LP; LP50, 50 mg LP/kg feed; LP100, 100 mg LP/kg feed; LP200, 200 mg LP/kg feed.
Means with different small letters in the same row are significantly different (p<0.05).
p<0.05;
p<0.01;
p<0.001.