Literature DB >> 29595889

Dietary Onion or Ginger Modulates the Stress Response and Susceptibility to Vibrio harveyi JML1 Infection in Brown-marbled Grouper Epinephelus fuscoguttatus Juveniles.

E C Amar1, M J S Apines-Amar2, J P Faisan1.   

Abstract

Onion Allium cepa and ginger Zingiber officinale have health-promoting properties that qualify them as functional foods. The effect of repeated acute stressors was examined in juvenile Brown-marbled Grouper Epinephelus fuscoguttatus that were fed four diets supplemented with onion at 1.8%, ginger at 1.8%, vitamin C at 0.86%, and β-glucan at 0.8% of the diet. The non-supplemented diet served as the control. After 12 weeks of feeding, fish were exposed to stressors and were experimentally infected with a fish pathogen, the bacterium Vibrio harveyi JML1. After repeated exposure to hypoxia, cortisol levels rose significantly in the non-supplemented fish compared to those fed onion, ginger, β-glucan, or vitamin C. Within groups, postexposure cortisol levels in the onion-, ginger-, and vitamin C-fed fish did not change relative to pre-stress levels, whereas significant increases in poststress values were observed in the control and β-glucan groups. The net cortisol increase was also significantly greater in the non-supplemented group compared to the supplemented groups. The net cortisol increase did not vary among the supplemented groups except that the β-glucan-fed group exhibited a higher net increase than the onion-fed group. Similarly, repeated acute exposure to osmotic stress significantly increased the plasma cortisol level in the non-supplemented group compared to groups that received supplements; no differences were found in the supplemented groups except the β-glucan group. Within groups, significant increases in poststress values relative to pre-stress levels were found only in the control and β-glucan groups. Repeated acute exposure to hypoxia significantly increased cumulative mortality in the control group compared to the supplemented groups (except the β-glucan group), whereas repeated exposure to acute osmotic stress significantly increased cumulative mortality only in the control group 10 d after infection with V. harveyi JML1. Based on our collective results, most of the supplemented groups performed better than the control, but the best supplements were onion and ginger in terms of enhancing stress tolerance and increasing survival of Brown-marbled Grouper upon infection with V. harveyi JML1.
© 2017 American Fisheries Society.

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Year:  2018        PMID: 29595889     DOI: 10.1002/aah.10005

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Aquat Anim Health        ISSN: 0899-7659            Impact factor:   1.625


  2 in total

1.  Beneficial Shifts in the Gut Bacterial Community of Gilthead Seabream (Sparus aurata) Juveniles Supplemented with Allium-Derived Compound Propyl Propane Thiosulfonate (PTSO).

Authors:  Miguel Rabelo-Ruiz; Antonio M Newman-Portela; Juan Manuel Peralta-Sánchez; Antonio Manuel Martín-Platero; María Del Mar Agraso; Laura Bermúdez; María Arántzazu Aguinaga; Alberto Baños; Mercedes Maqueda; Eva Valdivia; Manuel Martínez-Bueno
Journal:  Animals (Basel)       Date:  2022-07-17       Impact factor: 3.231

2.  Effects of Ascorbic Acid and β-1,3-Glucan on Survival, Physiological Response and Flesh Quality of Cultured Tiger Grouper (Epinephelus fuscoguttatus) during Simulated Transport in Water.

Authors:  Bo Wu; Qi Wang; Jie Cao; Jun Mei; Jing Xie
Journal:  Biology (Basel)       Date:  2020-02-21
  2 in total

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