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Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems

The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of 16L:8D photoperiod with green (GREEN) or white (WHITE) lights during incubation on hatching performance, blood melatonin, corticosterone, and serotonin levels, hypothalamic expressions of genes related to photoreception, serotonin, and stress syste...

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Autores principales: Özkan, Sezen, Yalçın, Servet, Bayraktar, Özer Hakan, Bilgen, Güldehen, Dayıoğlu, Miray, Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth, Rodenburg, T. Bas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9468462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36088819
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2022.102114
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author Özkan, Sezen
Yalçın, Servet
Bayraktar, Özer Hakan
Bilgen, Güldehen
Dayıoğlu, Miray
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Rodenburg, T. Bas
author_facet Özkan, Sezen
Yalçın, Servet
Bayraktar, Özer Hakan
Bilgen, Güldehen
Dayıoğlu, Miray
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Rodenburg, T. Bas
author_sort Özkan, Sezen
collection PubMed
description The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of 16L:8D photoperiod with green (GREEN) or white (WHITE) lights during incubation on hatching performance, blood melatonin, corticosterone, and serotonin levels, hypothalamic expressions of genes related to photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems in layers in relation with feather pecking behavior. Dark incubation (DARK) was the control. Eggs (n = 1,176) from Brown Nick breeders in 2 batches (n = 588/batch) were incubated in the experiment. A total of 396 female chicks and 261 hens were used at rearing and laying periods until 40 wk. Incubation lighting did not affect hatchability, day-old chick weight, and length, but resulted in a more synchronized hatch as compared with the DARK. The effect of incubation lighting on blood hormones was not significant except for reduced serotonin in the GREEN group at the end of the experiment. There was no effect of incubation lighting on gentle, severe, and aggressive pecking of birds during the early rearing period. From 16 wk, GREEN hens showed increased gentle pecking with increasing age. WHITE hens had the highest gentle pecking frequency at 16 wk while they performed less gentle but higher severe and aggressive pecks at 24 and 32 wk. At hatching, the hypothalamic expression of CRH, 5-HTR1A, and 5-HTR1B was higher for the WHITE group compared with both GREEN and DARK, however, 5-HTT expression was higher in GREEN than WHITE which was similar to DARK. Except for the highest VA opsin expression obtained for WHITE hens at 40 wk of age, there was no change in hypothalamic expression levels of rhodopsin, VA opsin, red, and green opsins at any age. Although blood hormone levels were not consistent, results provide preliminary evidence that incubation lighting modulates the pecking tendencies of laying hens, probably through the observed changes in hypothalamic expression of genes related to the serotonin system and stress. Significant correlations among the hypothalamic gene expression levels supplied further evidence for the associations among photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems.
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spelling pubmed-94684622022-09-14 Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems Özkan, Sezen Yalçın, Servet Bayraktar, Özer Hakan Bilgen, Güldehen Dayıoğlu, Miray Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth Rodenburg, T. Bas Poult Sci PHYSIOLOGY AND REPRODUCTION The aim of this study was to evaluate the effect of 16L:8D photoperiod with green (GREEN) or white (WHITE) lights during incubation on hatching performance, blood melatonin, corticosterone, and serotonin levels, hypothalamic expressions of genes related to photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems in layers in relation with feather pecking behavior. Dark incubation (DARK) was the control. Eggs (n = 1,176) from Brown Nick breeders in 2 batches (n = 588/batch) were incubated in the experiment. A total of 396 female chicks and 261 hens were used at rearing and laying periods until 40 wk. Incubation lighting did not affect hatchability, day-old chick weight, and length, but resulted in a more synchronized hatch as compared with the DARK. The effect of incubation lighting on blood hormones was not significant except for reduced serotonin in the GREEN group at the end of the experiment. There was no effect of incubation lighting on gentle, severe, and aggressive pecking of birds during the early rearing period. From 16 wk, GREEN hens showed increased gentle pecking with increasing age. WHITE hens had the highest gentle pecking frequency at 16 wk while they performed less gentle but higher severe and aggressive pecks at 24 and 32 wk. At hatching, the hypothalamic expression of CRH, 5-HTR1A, and 5-HTR1B was higher for the WHITE group compared with both GREEN and DARK, however, 5-HTT expression was higher in GREEN than WHITE which was similar to DARK. Except for the highest VA opsin expression obtained for WHITE hens at 40 wk of age, there was no change in hypothalamic expression levels of rhodopsin, VA opsin, red, and green opsins at any age. Although blood hormone levels were not consistent, results provide preliminary evidence that incubation lighting modulates the pecking tendencies of laying hens, probably through the observed changes in hypothalamic expression of genes related to the serotonin system and stress. Significant correlations among the hypothalamic gene expression levels supplied further evidence for the associations among photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems. Elsevier 2022-08-05 /pmc/articles/PMC9468462/ /pubmed/36088819 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2022.102114 Text en © 2022 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle PHYSIOLOGY AND REPRODUCTION
Özkan, Sezen
Yalçın, Servet
Bayraktar, Özer Hakan
Bilgen, Güldehen
Dayıoğlu, Miray
Bolhuis, J. Elizabeth
Rodenburg, T. Bas
Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
title Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
title_full Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
title_fullStr Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
title_full_unstemmed Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
title_short Effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
title_sort effects of incubation lighting with green or white light on brown layers: hatching performance, feather pecking and hypothalamic expressions of genes related with photoreception, serotonin, and stress systems
topic PHYSIOLOGY AND REPRODUCTION
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9468462/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36088819
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2022.102114
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