Cargando…

Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis

BACKGROUND: The so-called “hepatic lipidosis” in turkeys is an acute progressive disease associated with a high mortality rate in a very short time. Dead animals show a massive fatty degeneration of the liver. The cause is still unclear. Previous findings suggest that there may be parallels to human...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Visscher, Christian, Middendorf, Lea, Günther, Ronald, Engels, Alexandra, Leibfacher, Christof, Möhle, Henrik, Düngelhoef, Kristian, Weier, Stefan, Haider, Wolfram, Radko, Dimitri
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5450264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28558775
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12944-017-0484-8
_version_ 1783239936276692992
author Visscher, Christian
Middendorf, Lea
Günther, Ronald
Engels, Alexandra
Leibfacher, Christof
Möhle, Henrik
Düngelhoef, Kristian
Weier, Stefan
Haider, Wolfram
Radko, Dimitri
author_facet Visscher, Christian
Middendorf, Lea
Günther, Ronald
Engels, Alexandra
Leibfacher, Christof
Möhle, Henrik
Düngelhoef, Kristian
Weier, Stefan
Haider, Wolfram
Radko, Dimitri
author_sort Visscher, Christian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The so-called “hepatic lipidosis” in turkeys is an acute progressive disease associated with a high mortality rate in a very short time. Dead animals show a massive fatty degeneration of the liver. The cause is still unclear. Previous findings suggest that there may be parallels to human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. The object of the study was to examine the changes in the fat contents, the fatty acid composition and the iron content in livers of animals, which have died from hepatic lipidosis. METHODS: The conspicuous livers (n = 85) were collected from 20 flocks where the phenomenon of massive increased animal losses accompanied by marked macroscopically visible pathological liver steatosis suddenly occurred. For comparison and as a reference, livers (n = 16) of two healthy flocks were taken. Healthy and diseased flocks were fed identical diets concerning official nutrient recommendations and were operating under standardized, comparable conventional conditions. RESULTS: Compared to livers of healthy animals, in the livers of turkeys died from hepatic lipidosis there were found massively increased fat levels (130 ± 33.2 vs. 324 ± 101 g/kg dry matter-DM). In all fatty livers, different fatty acids concentrations were present in significantly increased concentrations compared to controls (palmitic acid: 104 g/kg DM, +345%; palmitoleic acid: 18.0 g/kg DM, + 570%; oleic acid: 115 g/kg DM, +437%). Fatty acids concentrations relevant for liver metabolism and inflammation were significantly reduced (arachidonic acid: 2.92 g/kg DM, −66.6%; eicosapentaenoic acid: 0.141 g/kg DM, −78.3%; docosahexaenoic acid: 0.227 g/kg DM, −90.4%). The ratio of certain fatty acids to one another between control and case livers changed analogously to liver diseases in humans (e.g.: C18:0/C16:0 – 0.913 against 0.311; C16:1n7/C16:0 – 0.090 against 0.165; C18:1/C18:0 – 0.938 against 4.03). The iron content in the liver tissue also increased massively (271 ± 51.5 vs 712 ± 214 mg/kg DM). CONCLUSION: The hepatic lipidosis has a massive impact on the lipid content, the lipid composition and the iron content in the liver. The character of the metabolic disorder includes parallels to the non-alcoholic steatohepatitis in humans.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5450264
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher BioMed Central
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-54502642017-06-01 Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis Visscher, Christian Middendorf, Lea Günther, Ronald Engels, Alexandra Leibfacher, Christof Möhle, Henrik Düngelhoef, Kristian Weier, Stefan Haider, Wolfram Radko, Dimitri Lipids Health Dis Research BACKGROUND: The so-called “hepatic lipidosis” in turkeys is an acute progressive disease associated with a high mortality rate in a very short time. Dead animals show a massive fatty degeneration of the liver. The cause is still unclear. Previous findings suggest that there may be parallels to human non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. The object of the study was to examine the changes in the fat contents, the fatty acid composition and the iron content in livers of animals, which have died from hepatic lipidosis. METHODS: The conspicuous livers (n = 85) were collected from 20 flocks where the phenomenon of massive increased animal losses accompanied by marked macroscopically visible pathological liver steatosis suddenly occurred. For comparison and as a reference, livers (n = 16) of two healthy flocks were taken. Healthy and diseased flocks were fed identical diets concerning official nutrient recommendations and were operating under standardized, comparable conventional conditions. RESULTS: Compared to livers of healthy animals, in the livers of turkeys died from hepatic lipidosis there were found massively increased fat levels (130 ± 33.2 vs. 324 ± 101 g/kg dry matter-DM). In all fatty livers, different fatty acids concentrations were present in significantly increased concentrations compared to controls (palmitic acid: 104 g/kg DM, +345%; palmitoleic acid: 18.0 g/kg DM, + 570%; oleic acid: 115 g/kg DM, +437%). Fatty acids concentrations relevant for liver metabolism and inflammation were significantly reduced (arachidonic acid: 2.92 g/kg DM, −66.6%; eicosapentaenoic acid: 0.141 g/kg DM, −78.3%; docosahexaenoic acid: 0.227 g/kg DM, −90.4%). The ratio of certain fatty acids to one another between control and case livers changed analogously to liver diseases in humans (e.g.: C18:0/C16:0 – 0.913 against 0.311; C16:1n7/C16:0 – 0.090 against 0.165; C18:1/C18:0 – 0.938 against 4.03). The iron content in the liver tissue also increased massively (271 ± 51.5 vs 712 ± 214 mg/kg DM). CONCLUSION: The hepatic lipidosis has a massive impact on the lipid content, the lipid composition and the iron content in the liver. The character of the metabolic disorder includes parallels to the non-alcoholic steatohepatitis in humans. BioMed Central 2017-05-30 /pmc/articles/PMC5450264/ /pubmed/28558775 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12944-017-0484-8 Text en © The Author(s). 2017 Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
spellingShingle Research
Visscher, Christian
Middendorf, Lea
Günther, Ronald
Engels, Alexandra
Leibfacher, Christof
Möhle, Henrik
Düngelhoef, Kristian
Weier, Stefan
Haider, Wolfram
Radko, Dimitri
Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
title Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
title_full Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
title_fullStr Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
title_full_unstemmed Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
title_short Fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
title_sort fat content, fatty acid pattern and iron content in livers of turkeys with hepatic lipidosis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5450264/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28558775
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12944-017-0484-8
work_keys_str_mv AT visscherchristian fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT middendorflea fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT guntherronald fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT engelsalexandra fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT leibfacherchristof fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT mohlehenrik fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT dungelhoefkristian fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT weierstefan fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT haiderwolfram fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis
AT radkodimitri fatcontentfattyacidpatternandironcontentinliversofturkeyswithhepaticlipidosis