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Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health

Trace mineral minerals Zn, Cu, and Mn play important roles in breeder production and progeny performance. The objective of this study was to determine maternal supplementation of trace mineral minerals on breeder production and progeny growth and development. A total of 540 broiler breeders, Cobb 50...

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Autores principales: de Arruda Roque, Fabricia, Chen, Juxing, Araujo, Raquel B, Murcio, André Luis, de Souza Leite, Brunna Garcia, Dias Tanaka, Mylena Tückmantel, Granghelli, Carlos Alexandre, Pelissari, Paulo Henrique, Bueno Carvalho, Rachel Santos, Torres, David, Vázquez‐Añón, Mercedes, Hancock, Deana, Soares da Silva Araujo, Cristiane, Araujo, Lúcio Francelino
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9577897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36267581
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.948378
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author de Arruda Roque, Fabricia
Chen, Juxing
Araujo, Raquel B
Murcio, André Luis
de Souza Leite, Brunna Garcia
Dias Tanaka, Mylena Tückmantel
Granghelli, Carlos Alexandre
Pelissari, Paulo Henrique
Bueno Carvalho, Rachel Santos
Torres, David
Vázquez‐Añón, Mercedes
Hancock, Deana
Soares da Silva Araujo, Cristiane
Araujo, Lúcio Francelino
author_facet de Arruda Roque, Fabricia
Chen, Juxing
Araujo, Raquel B
Murcio, André Luis
de Souza Leite, Brunna Garcia
Dias Tanaka, Mylena Tückmantel
Granghelli, Carlos Alexandre
Pelissari, Paulo Henrique
Bueno Carvalho, Rachel Santos
Torres, David
Vázquez‐Añón, Mercedes
Hancock, Deana
Soares da Silva Araujo, Cristiane
Araujo, Lúcio Francelino
author_sort de Arruda Roque, Fabricia
collection PubMed
description Trace mineral minerals Zn, Cu, and Mn play important roles in breeder production and progeny performance. The objective of this study was to determine maternal supplementation of trace mineral minerals on breeder production and progeny growth and development. A total of 540 broiler breeders, Cobb 500 (Slow feathering; 0–66 weeks old) were assigned to one of three treatment groups with the same basal diet and three different supplemental trace minerals: ITM–inorganic trace minerals in sulfates: 100, 16, and 100 ppm of Zn, Cu, and Mn respectively; MMHAC -mineral methionine hydroxy analog chelate: 50, 8, and 50 ppm of bis-chelated MINTREX(®)Zn, Cu and Mn (Novus International, Inc.), and TMAAC - trace minerals amino acid complex: 50, 8, and 50 ppm of Zn, Cu, and Mn. At 28 weeks of age, eggs from breeder treatments were hatched for progeny trial, 10 pens with 6 males and 6 female birds per pen were fed a common diet with ITM for 45 days. Breeder production, egg quality, progeny growth performance, mRNA expression of gut health associated genes in breeder and progeny chicks were measured. Data were analyzed by one-way ANOVA; means were separated by Fisher’s protected LSD test. A p-Value ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically different and 0.1 was considered numerical trend. Breeders on ITM treatment had higher (p < 0.05) body weight (BW), weight gain and lower (p < 0.05) feed conversion ratio (FCR) from 0 to 10 weeks, when compared to birds fed MMHAC. MMHAC significantly improved egg mass by 3 g (p < 0.05) and FCR by 34 points (0.05 < p < 0.1) throughout the reproductive period (26–66 weeks) in comparison to ITM. MMHAC improved (p < 0.01) egg yolk color versus (vs.) ITM and TMAAC in all periods, except 28 weeks, increased (p < 0.01) eggshell thickness and resistance vs. TMAAC at 58 weeks, and reduced (p < 0.05) jejunal NF-κB gene expression vs. TMAAC at 24 weeks. There was a significant reduction in tibial dry matter weight, Seedor index and resistance for the breeders that received MMHAC and/or TMAAC when compared to ITM at 18 weeks. Lower seedor index but numerically wider tibial circumference was seen in hens fed MMHAC at 24 weeks, and wider tibial circumference but lower tibial resistance in hens fed TMAAC at 66 weeks. Maternal supplementation of MMHAC in breeder hens increased (p < 0.0001) BW vs. ITM and TMAAC at hatching, reduced (p < 0.05) feed intake vs. ITM at d14 and d28, and improved (p < 0.01) FCR and performance index vs. TMAAC at d28, reduced (p < 0.01) NF-κB gene expression and increased (p < 0.05) A20 gene expression vs. TMAAC on d0 and vs. ITM on d14, reduced (p < 0.05) TLR2 gene expression vs. ITM on d0 and vs. TMAAC on d14, increased (p < 0.05) MUC2 gene expression vs. both ITM and TMAAC on d45 in progeny jejunum. Overall, these results suggest that supplementation with lower levels of MHA-chelated trace minerals improved breeder production and egg quality and reduced breeder jejunal inflammation while maintaining tibial development in comparison to those receiving higher inorganic mineral supplementation, and it also carried over the benefits to progeny with better growth performance, less jejunal inflammation and better innate immune response and gut barrier function in comparison to ITM and/or TMAAC.
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spelling pubmed-95778972022-10-19 Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health de Arruda Roque, Fabricia Chen, Juxing Araujo, Raquel B Murcio, André Luis de Souza Leite, Brunna Garcia Dias Tanaka, Mylena Tückmantel Granghelli, Carlos Alexandre Pelissari, Paulo Henrique Bueno Carvalho, Rachel Santos Torres, David Vázquez‐Añón, Mercedes Hancock, Deana Soares da Silva Araujo, Cristiane Araujo, Lúcio Francelino Front Physiol Physiology Trace mineral minerals Zn, Cu, and Mn play important roles in breeder production and progeny performance. The objective of this study was to determine maternal supplementation of trace mineral minerals on breeder production and progeny growth and development. A total of 540 broiler breeders, Cobb 500 (Slow feathering; 0–66 weeks old) were assigned to one of three treatment groups with the same basal diet and three different supplemental trace minerals: ITM–inorganic trace minerals in sulfates: 100, 16, and 100 ppm of Zn, Cu, and Mn respectively; MMHAC -mineral methionine hydroxy analog chelate: 50, 8, and 50 ppm of bis-chelated MINTREX(®)Zn, Cu and Mn (Novus International, Inc.), and TMAAC - trace minerals amino acid complex: 50, 8, and 50 ppm of Zn, Cu, and Mn. At 28 weeks of age, eggs from breeder treatments were hatched for progeny trial, 10 pens with 6 males and 6 female birds per pen were fed a common diet with ITM for 45 days. Breeder production, egg quality, progeny growth performance, mRNA expression of gut health associated genes in breeder and progeny chicks were measured. Data were analyzed by one-way ANOVA; means were separated by Fisher’s protected LSD test. A p-Value ≤ 0.05 was considered statistically different and 0.1 was considered numerical trend. Breeders on ITM treatment had higher (p < 0.05) body weight (BW), weight gain and lower (p < 0.05) feed conversion ratio (FCR) from 0 to 10 weeks, when compared to birds fed MMHAC. MMHAC significantly improved egg mass by 3 g (p < 0.05) and FCR by 34 points (0.05 < p < 0.1) throughout the reproductive period (26–66 weeks) in comparison to ITM. MMHAC improved (p < 0.01) egg yolk color versus (vs.) ITM and TMAAC in all periods, except 28 weeks, increased (p < 0.01) eggshell thickness and resistance vs. TMAAC at 58 weeks, and reduced (p < 0.05) jejunal NF-κB gene expression vs. TMAAC at 24 weeks. There was a significant reduction in tibial dry matter weight, Seedor index and resistance for the breeders that received MMHAC and/or TMAAC when compared to ITM at 18 weeks. Lower seedor index but numerically wider tibial circumference was seen in hens fed MMHAC at 24 weeks, and wider tibial circumference but lower tibial resistance in hens fed TMAAC at 66 weeks. Maternal supplementation of MMHAC in breeder hens increased (p < 0.0001) BW vs. ITM and TMAAC at hatching, reduced (p < 0.05) feed intake vs. ITM at d14 and d28, and improved (p < 0.01) FCR and performance index vs. TMAAC at d28, reduced (p < 0.01) NF-κB gene expression and increased (p < 0.05) A20 gene expression vs. TMAAC on d0 and vs. ITM on d14, reduced (p < 0.05) TLR2 gene expression vs. ITM on d0 and vs. TMAAC on d14, increased (p < 0.05) MUC2 gene expression vs. both ITM and TMAAC on d45 in progeny jejunum. Overall, these results suggest that supplementation with lower levels of MHA-chelated trace minerals improved breeder production and egg quality and reduced breeder jejunal inflammation while maintaining tibial development in comparison to those receiving higher inorganic mineral supplementation, and it also carried over the benefits to progeny with better growth performance, less jejunal inflammation and better innate immune response and gut barrier function in comparison to ITM and/or TMAAC. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-09-23 /pmc/articles/PMC9577897/ /pubmed/36267581 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.948378 Text en Copyright © 2022 de Arruda Roque, Chen, Araujo, Murcio, de Souza Leite, Dias Tanaka, Granghelli, Pelissari, Bueno Carvalho, Torres, Vázquez‐Añón, Hancock, Soares da Silva Araujo and Araujo. 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(s) 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 Physiology
de Arruda Roque, Fabricia
Chen, Juxing
Araujo, Raquel B
Murcio, André Luis
de Souza Leite, Brunna Garcia
Dias Tanaka, Mylena Tückmantel
Granghelli, Carlos Alexandre
Pelissari, Paulo Henrique
Bueno Carvalho, Rachel Santos
Torres, David
Vázquez‐Añón, Mercedes
Hancock, Deana
Soares da Silva Araujo, Cristiane
Araujo, Lúcio Francelino
Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
title Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
title_full Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
title_fullStr Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
title_full_unstemmed Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
title_short Maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
title_sort maternal supplementation of different trace mineral sources on broiler breeder production and progeny growth and gut health
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9577897/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36267581
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2022.948378
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