Research Info

Home \Effects of Dietary Taurine on ...
Title
Effects of Dietary Taurine on Maturation Indices, Antioxidant Capacity, Ovaries Amino and Fatty Acids Profile, and Vitellogenin Gene Transcription Level in Penaeus vannamei Female Brooders
Type Article
Keywords
lipid metabolism; maturation; penaeid shrimp; taurine; vitellogenin
Abstract
A 30-day research was carried out to examine the impacts of dietary taurine (Tau) on ovaries maturation and physiological responses of Penaeus vannamei female brooders (29.4  0.2 g). A basal diet (497 g kg−1 protein and 140 g kg−1 lipid) was administered with graded levels of Tau ranging from 0 (control) to 2, 4, 6, 8, and 10 g kg−1. A total of 180 shrimp brooders were stocked into 18 250 L black circular polyethylene tanks. Female (n = 5) and male (n = 5) shrimps were stocked in each tank and supplied with seawater (35.2  3.1 g L−1 salinity, 28.9  1.4°C) and the experimental feeds were offered to shrimp twice a day at 5% of their biomass. Supplementing diet with 4–8 g Tau kg−1 reduced latency period after eye stalk ablation to spawning (5–6 days) that was associated with higher hepatopancreatic and gonadosomatic (except for 8 g Tau kg−1 diet) indices (p<0:05). With 10 g Tau kg−1 diet hepatopancreas glutathione peroxidase activity and total antioxidant capacity increased and catalase activity increased by 6 g Tau kg−1 diet. Supplementing diet with Tau-enhanced bile-salt dependent lipase activity in the gut. Docosahexaenoic acid and Tau levels were elevated in the ovaries with the increment of dietary Tau level (p<0:05). Plasma total protein, calcium, cholesterol, and high-density lipoprotein increased with inclusion of 6–10 g Tau kg−1 diet. The transcription levels of vitellogenin, insulin-like growth factor II, superoxide dismutase, prophenoloxidase, and lysozyme genes transcription levels were upregulated in the hepatopancreas of shrimp brooders fed 6–10 g Tau kg−1 diet (p<0:05). It seems that Tau at 4–8 g kg−1 diet by modulating lipid metabolism, antioxidant capacity, and immunocompetence can improve maturation and health status of P. vannamei brooders.
Researchers mansour tarfi (First researcher) , Mahmoud Nafisi Bahabadi (Second researcher) , Vahid Morshedi (Third researcher) , Amin Oujifard (Fourth researcher) , Naser Agh (Fifth researcher) , ُAhmad qasemei (Not in first six researchers) , shirin hamedi (Not in first six researchers) ,