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A study on the expression of apoptotic molecules related to death receptor and endoplasmic reticulum pathways in the jejunum of AFB(1)-intoxicated chickens

Aflatoxin B(1) (AFB(1)) is a common contaminant of poultry feeds in tropical and subtropical climates. Early researches have well established the hepatotoxic, carcinogenic, and immunotoxic effects of AFB(1) on humans and animals. Recently, it has been shown that AFB(1) could cause the up- or down-al...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Zheng, Zhixiang, Zuo, Zhicai, Zhu, Panpan, Wang, Fengyuan, Yin, Heng, Peng, Xi, Fang, Jing, Cui, Hengmin, Gao, Caixia, Song, Hetao, Ouyang, Ping, Zhou, Yi, Zhao, Song
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5685699/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29163778
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.20333
Descripción
Sumario:Aflatoxin B(1) (AFB(1)) is a common contaminant of poultry feeds in tropical and subtropical climates. Early researches have well established the hepatotoxic, carcinogenic, and immunotoxic effects of AFB(1) on humans and animals. Recently, it has been shown that AFB(1) could cause the up- or down-alteration of mitochondrial pathway molecule expression. However, the information on the expression of death receptor and endoplasmic reticulum molecules in the jejunal apoptosis induced by AFB(1) were unavailable. So the present study was conducted to explore the expression of apoptotic molecules related to death receptor and endoplasmic reticulum in the jejunal cells of chickens exposed to AFB(1) diet for 3 weeks. Total of 144 one-day-old chickens was randomly divided into two groups, namely control group (containing 0 mg/kg AFB(1)) and AFB(1) group (containing 0.6 mg/kg AFB(1)). Histopathological observation and microscopic quantitative analysis revealed morphological changes in the jejunum such as the shedding of the mucosal epithelial cells in the apical region of villi along with the decrease of villus height, villus area and villus/crypt ratio in the AFB(1) group. Both TUNEL and flow cytometry assays showed that AFB(1) intake induced excessive apoptosis of jejunal cells. Quantitative real-time PCR test displayed the general upregulation of death receptors (FAS, FASL, TNF-α and TNF-R1), endoplasmic reticulum signals (GRP78 and GRP94) as well as initiator and executioner caspases (CASPASE-10, CASPASE-8 and CASPASE-3) in the jejunum of AFB(1)-intoxicated chickens. It's the first study demonstrating that AFB(1) induced apoptosis of chickens’ jejunum accompanied by the alteration of death receptor and endoplasmic reticulum molecule expression.