| Literature DB >> 31511616 |
Zhanrui Huang1, Yaling Wang2, Mei Qiu1, Lijun Sun1, Yijia Deng1, Xiaobo Wang1, Siyuan Bi3, Ravi Gooneratne4, Jian Zhao5.
Abstract
T-2 toxin (T-2), a naturally occurring mycotoxin that often accumulates in aquatic animals via contaminated feed, is toxic to animals, including humans. In this study, six groups of shrimp (n = 30 shrimps/group) were given T-2 in feed at concentrations of 0-12.2 mg/kg for 20 days. T-2 accumulation, intestinal histopathology, digestive enzyme activities and subsequent effects on shrimp are reported. Compared to the control, T-2 significantly reduced weight gain, specific growth rate, and survival. The histopathology of shrimp intestine showed concentration-dependent degenerative and necrotic changes in response to dietary T-2. Progressive damage to the microstructures of shrimp intestine occurred with increasing dietary T-2 concentrations, with initial inflammation of the mucosal tissue at T-2 concentrations of 0.5 and 1.2 mg/kg, progressing to disappearance of intestinal villi and degeneration and necrosis of the submucosa at 12.2 mg/kg. Intestinal amylase and protease activities increased at low T-2 concentrations but showed significant inhibition at high concentrations; however, the opposite trend occurred for lipase activity. Collectively, these results indicate that digestive enzyme activities and mucosal structures are markedly affected by exposure to T-2, and these may have contributed to the lower survival rate of shrimp.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31511616 PMCID: PMC6739391 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-49004-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Reductions in growth parameters and survival as a function of dietary concentrations of T-2 toxin. Different superscripts indicate significant differences. Weight gain is shown as WG, specific growth rate is shown as SGR, and survival rate is shown as SR.
Criteria used to evaluate the degree of damage to shrimp intestine.
| Damage degree | Criteria | Intestinal structure | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | B | C | D | E | ||
| Striated border | Mucosa | Submucosa | Muscular layer | Whole structure | ||
| − | Normal | Arranged closely | Folds, villi & crypts normal | Tight intercellular space | Cells arranged in order | Clear and complete |
| + | Minimal | Arranged closely | Shorter folds & short villi | Large spaces | Space enlarged | Loose structure |
| ++ | Mild | Swelling | Less folds, Shorter villi | Large spaces | Vacuolation & dispersed | Loose tissue |
| +++ | Moderate | Degeneration | Folds almost disappeared, Very short villi | Not compact or dense | Marked vacuolation, Nucleolysis | Necrosis |
| ++++ | Severe | Exfoliation | Disintegration of villi, some necrosis | Dissolution | Separation | Necrosis |
A, B, C, D refers to different parts of the intestine as referred to in Fig. 2.
Figure 2Histopathology of shrimp intestine exposed T-2 (×400). Description of letter abbreviations: A- Striated border, B- Mucosa, C- Submucosa, and D- Muscular layers. Figures a to f are the shrimp given 0 (control), 0.5, 1.2, 2.4, 4.8, 12.2 T-2 mg/kg respectively.
Figure 3The effect of T-2 on digestive enzyme activities (Mean + SD) in shrimp intestine. Bars with different superscript letters for each enzyme are significantly different (P < 0.05) compared with the control (0).
Figure 4Effect of T-2 exposure concentration on the ratio of amylase enzyme activity (treatment group/control group) in shrimp intestine. NOAEL: No Observable Adverse Effect Level; EC50: T-2 concentration for 50% of amylase enzyme activity.