Dietary Glucose Stimulus at Larval Stage Modifies the Carbohydrate Metabolic Pathway in Gilthead Seabream (Sparus Aurata) Juveniles: An in Vivo Approach Using (14)C-Starch
2016
Rocha, Filipa | Dias, Jorge | Geurden, Inge | Dinis, Maria Teresa | Panserat, Stéphane | Engrola, Sofia | Universidade do Algarve | Universidade de Coimbra = University of Coimbra [Portugal] (UC) | Khalifa University of Science and Technology = Khalifa University [Abou Dabi] (KUSTAR) | Nutrition, Métabolisme, Aquaculture (NuMéA) ; Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique (INRA)-Université de Pau et des Pays de l'Adour (UPPA) | This work was partially funded under the Seventh Framework Programme by the ARRAINA project N°288925: Advanced Research Initiatives for Nutrition & Aquaculture. The work done at the Centre of Marine Sciences was partially funded through the Fundação para a Ciência e Tecnologia (FCT, Portugal) through project CCMAR/Multi/04326/2013. A part of molecular biology work at INRA was supported by the Conseil Régional d'Aquitaine (CRA n° 20121201001, 2013-2015) “Nouvelles Stratégies Alimentaires pour l'Aquaculture”. F. Rocha acknowledges the financial support by FCT through grant SFRH/BD/74921/2010. S. Engrola acknowledges a FCT investigator grant IF/00482/2014/ CP1217/CT0005 funded by the FCT, the European Social Fund and the Operational Programme Human Potential | European Project: 288925,EC:FP7:KBBE,FP7-KBBE-2011-5,ARRAINA(2012)
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Show more [+] Less [-]English. The concept of nutritional programmingwas investigated in order to enhance the use of dietary carbohydrates in gilthead seabream juveniles. We assessed the long-term effects of high-glucose stimuli, exerted at the larval stage, on the growth performance, nutrient digestibility and metabolic utilization and gene expression of seabream juveniles, challenged with a high-carbohydrate intake. During early development, a group of larvae (control, CTRL)were kept under a rich-protein-lipid feeding regimewhereas another group (GLU)was subjected to high-glucose stimuli, delivered intermittently over time. At juvenile stage, triplicate groups (IBW: 2.5 g) from each fish nutritional backgroundwere fed a high-protein (59.4%) low-carbohydrate (2.0%) diet before being subjected to a low-protein (43.0%) high-carbohydrate (33.0%) dietary challenge for 36-days. Fish from both treatments increased by 8-fold their initial body weight, but neither growth rate, feed intake, feed and protein efficiency, nutrient retention (except lipids) nor whole-body composition were affected (P ˃ 0.05) by fish early nutritional history. Nutrient digestibility was also similar among both groups. The metabolic fate of 14C-starch and 14C-amino acids tracers was estimated; GLU juveniles showed higher absorption of starch-derived glucose in the gut, suggesting an enhanced digestion of carbohydrates, while amino acid usewas not affected. Moreover, glucose was less used for de novo synthesis of hepatic proteins and muscle glycogen fromGLU fish (P b 0.05). Our metabolic data suggests that the early glucose stimuli may alter carbohydrate utilization in seabream juveniles
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