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Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition

This article is the first in a series of manuscripts to evaluate nutritional rehabilitation in chickens as a model to study interventions in children malnutrition (Part 1: Performance, Bone Mineralization, and Intestinal Morphometric Analysis). Inclusion of rye in poultry diets induces a nutritional...

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Autores principales: Baxter, Mikayla F. A., Latorre, Juan D., Koltes, Dawn A., Dridi, Sami, Greene, Elizabeth S., Bickler, Stephen W., Kim, Jae H., Merino-Guzman, Ruben, Hernandez-Velasco, Xochitl, Anthony, Nicholas B., Bottje, Walter G., Hargis, Billy M., Tellez, Guillermo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5876931/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29629373
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2018.00018
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author Baxter, Mikayla F. A.
Latorre, Juan D.
Koltes, Dawn A.
Dridi, Sami
Greene, Elizabeth S.
Bickler, Stephen W.
Kim, Jae H.
Merino-Guzman, Ruben
Hernandez-Velasco, Xochitl
Anthony, Nicholas B.
Bottje, Walter G.
Hargis, Billy M.
Tellez, Guillermo
author_facet Baxter, Mikayla F. A.
Latorre, Juan D.
Koltes, Dawn A.
Dridi, Sami
Greene, Elizabeth S.
Bickler, Stephen W.
Kim, Jae H.
Merino-Guzman, Ruben
Hernandez-Velasco, Xochitl
Anthony, Nicholas B.
Bottje, Walter G.
Hargis, Billy M.
Tellez, Guillermo
author_sort Baxter, Mikayla F. A.
collection PubMed
description This article is the first in a series of manuscripts to evaluate nutritional rehabilitation in chickens as a model to study interventions in children malnutrition (Part 1: Performance, Bone Mineralization, and Intestinal Morphometric Analysis). Inclusion of rye in poultry diets induces a nutritional deficit that leads to increased bacterial translocation, intestinal viscosity, and decreased bone mineralization. However, it is unclear the effect of diet on developmental stage or genetic strain. Therefore, the objective was to determine the effects of a rye diet during either the early or late phase of development on performance, bone mineralization, and intestinal morphology across three diverse genetic backgrounds. Modern 2015 (Cobb 500) broiler chicken, 1995 Cobb broiler chicken, and the Giant Jungle Fowl were randomly allocated into four different dietary treatments. Dietary treatments were (1) a control corn-based diet throughout the trial (corn–corn); (2) an early phase malnutrition diet where chicks received a rye-based diet for 10 days, and then switched to the control diet (rye–corn); (3) a malnutrition rye-diet that was fed throughout the trial (rye–rye); and (4) a late phase malnutrition diet where chicks received the control diet for 10 days, and then switched to the rye diet for the last phase (corn–rye). At 10 days of age, chicks were weighed and diets were switched in groups 2 and 4. At day 20 of age, all chickens were weighed and euthanized to collect bone and intestinal samples. Body weight, weight gain, and bone mineralization were different across diet, genetic line, age and all two- and three-way interactions (P < 0.05). Overall, Jungle Fowl were the most tolerant to a rye-based diet, and both the modern and 1995 broilers were significantly affected by the high rye-based diet. However, the 1995 broilers consuming the rye-based diet appeared to experience more permanent effects when compared with the modern broiler. The results of this study suggest that chickens have a great potential as a nutritional rehabilitation model in human trials. The 1995 broilers line was an intermediate genetic line between the fast growing modern line and the non-selected Jungle Fowl line, suggesting that it would be the most appropriate model to study for future studies.
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spelling pubmed-58769312018-04-06 Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition Baxter, Mikayla F. A. Latorre, Juan D. Koltes, Dawn A. Dridi, Sami Greene, Elizabeth S. Bickler, Stephen W. Kim, Jae H. Merino-Guzman, Ruben Hernandez-Velasco, Xochitl Anthony, Nicholas B. Bottje, Walter G. Hargis, Billy M. Tellez, Guillermo Front Nutr Nutrition This article is the first in a series of manuscripts to evaluate nutritional rehabilitation in chickens as a model to study interventions in children malnutrition (Part 1: Performance, Bone Mineralization, and Intestinal Morphometric Analysis). Inclusion of rye in poultry diets induces a nutritional deficit that leads to increased bacterial translocation, intestinal viscosity, and decreased bone mineralization. However, it is unclear the effect of diet on developmental stage or genetic strain. Therefore, the objective was to determine the effects of a rye diet during either the early or late phase of development on performance, bone mineralization, and intestinal morphology across three diverse genetic backgrounds. Modern 2015 (Cobb 500) broiler chicken, 1995 Cobb broiler chicken, and the Giant Jungle Fowl were randomly allocated into four different dietary treatments. Dietary treatments were (1) a control corn-based diet throughout the trial (corn–corn); (2) an early phase malnutrition diet where chicks received a rye-based diet for 10 days, and then switched to the control diet (rye–corn); (3) a malnutrition rye-diet that was fed throughout the trial (rye–rye); and (4) a late phase malnutrition diet where chicks received the control diet for 10 days, and then switched to the rye diet for the last phase (corn–rye). At 10 days of age, chicks were weighed and diets were switched in groups 2 and 4. At day 20 of age, all chickens were weighed and euthanized to collect bone and intestinal samples. Body weight, weight gain, and bone mineralization were different across diet, genetic line, age and all two- and three-way interactions (P < 0.05). Overall, Jungle Fowl were the most tolerant to a rye-based diet, and both the modern and 1995 broilers were significantly affected by the high rye-based diet. However, the 1995 broilers consuming the rye-based diet appeared to experience more permanent effects when compared with the modern broiler. The results of this study suggest that chickens have a great potential as a nutritional rehabilitation model in human trials. The 1995 broilers line was an intermediate genetic line between the fast growing modern line and the non-selected Jungle Fowl line, suggesting that it would be the most appropriate model to study for future studies. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-03-23 /pmc/articles/PMC5876931/ /pubmed/29629373 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2018.00018 Text en Copyright © 2018 Baxter, Latorre, Koltes, Dridi, Greene, Bickler, Kim, Merino-Guzman, Hernandez-Velasco, Anthony, Bottje, Hargis and Tellez. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Nutrition
Baxter, Mikayla F. A.
Latorre, Juan D.
Koltes, Dawn A.
Dridi, Sami
Greene, Elizabeth S.
Bickler, Stephen W.
Kim, Jae H.
Merino-Guzman, Ruben
Hernandez-Velasco, Xochitl
Anthony, Nicholas B.
Bottje, Walter G.
Hargis, Billy M.
Tellez, Guillermo
Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition
title Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition
title_full Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition
title_fullStr Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition
title_short Assessment of a Nutritional Rehabilitation Model in Two Modern Broilers and Their Jungle Fowl Ancestor: A Model for Better Understanding Childhood Undernutrition
title_sort assessment of a nutritional rehabilitation model in two modern broilers and their jungle fowl ancestor: a model for better understanding childhood undernutrition
topic Nutrition
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5876931/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29629373
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fnut.2018.00018
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