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Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Heat stress (HS) and Eimeria (E.) maxima infection are the most common physical and pathological stressors in chicken houses, and both affect intestinal digestibility and absorption leading to reduction in growth, morbidity, and mortality, causing massive economic losses. This study...

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Autores principales: Ghareeb, Ahmed F. A., Schneiders, Gustavo H., Foutz, James C., Milfort, Marie C., Fuller, Alberta L., Yuan, Jianmin, Rekaya, Romdhane, Aggrey, Samuel E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9219439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35739890
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12121554
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author Ghareeb, Ahmed F. A.
Schneiders, Gustavo H.
Foutz, James C.
Milfort, Marie C.
Fuller, Alberta L.
Yuan, Jianmin
Rekaya, Romdhane
Aggrey, Samuel E.
author_facet Ghareeb, Ahmed F. A.
Schneiders, Gustavo H.
Foutz, James C.
Milfort, Marie C.
Fuller, Alberta L.
Yuan, Jianmin
Rekaya, Romdhane
Aggrey, Samuel E.
author_sort Ghareeb, Ahmed F. A.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Heat stress (HS) and Eimeria (E.) maxima infection are the most common physical and pathological stressors in chicken houses, and both affect intestinal digestibility and absorption leading to reduction in growth, morbidity, and mortality, causing massive economic losses. This study identifies the impact of each stressor and their combined effects on apparent amino acid digestibility and molecular transporters expression in the ileum of broiler chicken. Heat-stressed chickens showed no change in amino acids digestibility, despite the reduction in feed intake. Combining HS and E. maxima infection modulated the reduction in amino acids digestibility observed in the infected chickens. The expression of the ileal amino acid transporters was severely impacted by E. maxima infection but not by HS. Interestingly, the infected group reared under HS exhibited significantly higher expression levels in all the enterocytic apical and about half of the basolateral amino acid transporters than the infected birds raised in thermoneutral environment. Thus, HS putatively curtailed the maldigestion effects of E. maxima. ABSTRACT: Eimeria (E.) maxima invades the midgut of chickens and destroys the intestinal mucosa, impacting nutrient digestibility and absorption. Heat stress (HS) commonly affects the broiler chicken and contributes to inflammation and oxidative stress. We examined the independent and combined effects of HS and E. maxima infection on apparent amino acid ileal digestibility (AID) and mRNA expression of amino acid transporters in broiler chickens (Ross 708). There were four treatment groups: thermoneutral-control (TNc) and infected (TNi), heat-stress control (HSc) and infected (HSi), six replicates of 10 birds/treatment. Ileal content and tissue were sampled at 6 d post infection to determine AID and transporters expression. Surprisingly, the HSi chickens exposed to two critical stressors exhibited normal AID. Only the TNi group displayed reduction in AID. Using TNc as control, the HSc group showed upregulated CAT1, LAT4, TAT1, SNAT1, and SNAT7. The HSi group showed upregulated CAT1 and LAT1, and downregulated b(0,+)AT, rBAT, SNAT1, and SNAT2. The TNi group showed upregulated CAT1, LAT1, and SNAT1 and downregulated B(0)AT1, b(0,+)AT, rBAT, LAT4, and TAT1. The expression of all enterocytic-apical and about half of the basolateral transporters was higher in the HSi group than in the TNi group, indicating that HS can putatively alleviate the E. maxima adverse effect on ileal digestion and absorption.
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spelling pubmed-92194392022-06-24 Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens Ghareeb, Ahmed F. A. Schneiders, Gustavo H. Foutz, James C. Milfort, Marie C. Fuller, Alberta L. Yuan, Jianmin Rekaya, Romdhane Aggrey, Samuel E. Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Heat stress (HS) and Eimeria (E.) maxima infection are the most common physical and pathological stressors in chicken houses, and both affect intestinal digestibility and absorption leading to reduction in growth, morbidity, and mortality, causing massive economic losses. This study identifies the impact of each stressor and their combined effects on apparent amino acid digestibility and molecular transporters expression in the ileum of broiler chicken. Heat-stressed chickens showed no change in amino acids digestibility, despite the reduction in feed intake. Combining HS and E. maxima infection modulated the reduction in amino acids digestibility observed in the infected chickens. The expression of the ileal amino acid transporters was severely impacted by E. maxima infection but not by HS. Interestingly, the infected group reared under HS exhibited significantly higher expression levels in all the enterocytic apical and about half of the basolateral amino acid transporters than the infected birds raised in thermoneutral environment. Thus, HS putatively curtailed the maldigestion effects of E. maxima. ABSTRACT: Eimeria (E.) maxima invades the midgut of chickens and destroys the intestinal mucosa, impacting nutrient digestibility and absorption. Heat stress (HS) commonly affects the broiler chicken and contributes to inflammation and oxidative stress. We examined the independent and combined effects of HS and E. maxima infection on apparent amino acid ileal digestibility (AID) and mRNA expression of amino acid transporters in broiler chickens (Ross 708). There were four treatment groups: thermoneutral-control (TNc) and infected (TNi), heat-stress control (HSc) and infected (HSi), six replicates of 10 birds/treatment. Ileal content and tissue were sampled at 6 d post infection to determine AID and transporters expression. Surprisingly, the HSi chickens exposed to two critical stressors exhibited normal AID. Only the TNi group displayed reduction in AID. Using TNc as control, the HSc group showed upregulated CAT1, LAT4, TAT1, SNAT1, and SNAT7. The HSi group showed upregulated CAT1 and LAT1, and downregulated b(0,+)AT, rBAT, SNAT1, and SNAT2. The TNi group showed upregulated CAT1, LAT1, and SNAT1 and downregulated B(0)AT1, b(0,+)AT, rBAT, LAT4, and TAT1. The expression of all enterocytic-apical and about half of the basolateral transporters was higher in the HSi group than in the TNi group, indicating that HS can putatively alleviate the E. maxima adverse effect on ileal digestion and absorption. MDPI 2022-06-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9219439/ /pubmed/35739890 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12121554 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Ghareeb, Ahmed F. A.
Schneiders, Gustavo H.
Foutz, James C.
Milfort, Marie C.
Fuller, Alberta L.
Yuan, Jianmin
Rekaya, Romdhane
Aggrey, Samuel E.
Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens
title Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens
title_full Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens
title_fullStr Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens
title_full_unstemmed Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens
title_short Heat Stress Alters the Effect of Eimeria maxima Infection on Ileal Amino Acids Digestibility and Transporters Expression in Meat-Type Chickens
title_sort heat stress alters the effect of eimeria maxima infection on ileal amino acids digestibility and transporters expression in meat-type chickens
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9219439/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35739890
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12121554
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