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Main Authors: Yousefi, Morteza, Adineh, Hossein, Al Sulivany, Basim S A, Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim, Yilmaz, Sevdan, Mahboub, Heba H, Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Animals : an open access journal from MDPI 2025
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40150424/
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author Yousefi, Morteza
Adineh, Hossein
Al Sulivany, Basim S A
Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim
Yilmaz, Sevdan
Mahboub, Heba H
Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza
author_facet Yousefi, Morteza
Adineh, Hossein
Al Sulivany, Basim S A
Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim
Yilmaz, Sevdan
Mahboub, Heba H
Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza
Yousefi, Morteza
Adineh, Hossein
Al Sulivany, Basim S A
Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim
Yilmaz, Sevdan
Mahboub, Heba H
Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents The Potential of the Inclusion of Extract in the Diet on the Growth Performance, Immunity, Digestive Enzyme Activity, and Oxidative Status of the Common Carp, , in Response to Ammonia Stress. Yousefi, Morteza Adineh, Hossein Al Sulivany, Basim S A Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim Yilmaz, Sevdan Mahboub, Heba H Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza Herbal feed additives have benefits in aquaculture, as they can improve growth performance, welfare, and stress resistance. Hence, the effects of dietary extract (PFE) on the growth parameters, digestive enzyme activity, antioxidant defense, innate immunity responses, and resistance to ammonia stress in the common carp, , were studied. Fish (15.14 ± 0.72 g) were fed on diets without the PFE (PFE0) or those fortified with 0.5% (PFE0.5), 1% (PFE1), or 2% (PFE2) PFE for 60 days and then subjected to ammonia stress for 24 h. The growth rate, feed efficiency, and amylase-, lipase-, and protease-specific activities in the PFE1 and PFE2 treatments showed significant elevations compared to these values in PFE0. The intestinal protease-specific activity significantly increased in all of the PFE treatments compared to that in the PFE0 treatment. Serum total protein and immunoglobulin significantly increased in the PFE1 treatment, whereas serum albumin and alternative complement activity significantly increased in the PFE2 treatment compared to these values in the PFE0 treatment. The PFE2 treatment significantly mitigated post-stress elevations in serum cortisol, glucose, malondialdehyde levels, alanine aminotransferase, and aspartate aminotransferase activities. The PFE1 treatment significantly mitigated post-stress elevations in CAT activity and decreases in SOD and lysozyme activity. In conclusion, 1-2% dietary PFE supplementation can improve the growth performance, health, and resilience to environmental stressors of the common carp.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40150424
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Animals : an open access journal from MDPI
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle The Potential of the Inclusion of Extract in the Diet on the Growth Performance, Immunity, Digestive Enzyme Activity, and Oxidative Status of the Common Carp, , in Response to Ammonia Stress.
Yousefi, Morteza
Adineh, Hossein
Al Sulivany, Basim S A
Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim
Yilmaz, Sevdan
Mahboub, Heba H
Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza
The Potential of the Inclusion of Extract in the Diet on the Growth Performance, Immunity, Digestive Enzyme Activity, and Oxidative Status of the Common Carp, , in Response to Ammonia Stress. Yousefi, Morteza Adineh, Hossein Al Sulivany, Basim S A Gholamalipour Alamdari, Ebrahim Yilmaz, Sevdan Mahboub, Heba H Hoseini, Seyyed Morteza Herbal feed additives have benefits in aquaculture, as they can improve growth performance, welfare, and stress resistance. Hence, the effects of dietary extract (PFE) on the growth parameters, digestive enzyme activity, antioxidant defense, innate immunity responses, and resistance to ammonia stress in the common carp, , were studied. Fish (15.14 ± 0.72 g) were fed on diets without the PFE (PFE0) or those fortified with 0.5% (PFE0.5), 1% (PFE1), or 2% (PFE2) PFE for 60 days and then subjected to ammonia stress for 24 h. The growth rate, feed efficiency, and amylase-, lipase-, and protease-specific activities in the PFE1 and PFE2 treatments showed significant elevations compared to these values in PFE0. The intestinal protease-specific activity significantly increased in all of the PFE treatments compared to that in the PFE0 treatment. Serum total protein and immunoglobulin significantly increased in the PFE1 treatment, whereas serum albumin and alternative complement activity significantly increased in the PFE2 treatment compared to these values in the PFE0 treatment. The PFE2 treatment significantly mitigated post-stress elevations in serum cortisol, glucose, malondialdehyde levels, alanine aminotransferase, and aspartate aminotransferase activities. The PFE1 treatment significantly mitigated post-stress elevations in CAT activity and decreases in SOD and lysozyme activity. In conclusion, 1-2% dietary PFE supplementation can improve the growth performance, health, and resilience to environmental stressors of the common carp.
title The Potential of the Inclusion of Extract in the Diet on the Growth Performance, Immunity, Digestive Enzyme Activity, and Oxidative Status of the Common Carp, , in Response to Ammonia Stress.
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40150424/