Dietary arachidonic acid promotes growth, improves immunity, and regulates the expression of immune-related signaling molecules in Macrobrachium nipponense (De Haan)

Aquaculture(2018)

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Abstract
Arachidonic acid (ARA) is involved in the growth and regulation of immunity in fish. Little research has focused on ARA in crustaceans. This study was an 8-week feeding experiment investigating the effects of dietary ARA on growth, antioxidative indices, and immune characteristics of the juvenile oriental river prawn (Macrobrachium nipponense). An ARA-enriched oil was supplemented into the basal diet to formulate six isonitrogenous and isoenergetic diets containing 0.02% (the control group), 0.28%, 0.54%, 0.86%, 1.22%, and 1.54% ARA dry weight. Diets were fed to juvenile prawns (mean weight: 0.104±0.002g) twice daily to apparent satiation in three replicates. Weight gain and specific growth rate of M. nipponense significantly increased with increasing dietary levels of ARA from 0.02% to 0.86% and thereafter declined. Hepatopancreas super oxide dismutase and catalase activities significantly increased with supplementation with ARA, particularly in prawns fed 1.22% and 1.54% ARA. The malondialdehyde level in prawns fed 1.54% ARA also significantly increased, and was higher than that of prawns fed ARA from 0.02% to 0.86%. Serum lysozyme activity was significantly greater in prawns fed 0.86% ARA compared with the other groups. mRNA expression of toll-like receptor signaling pathway-related genes was promoted by a dietary ARA level from 0.54% to 0.86% but inhibited with the higher ARA levels (1.22–1.54%). The mortality percentage increased after challenge with live Aeromonas hydrophila. The mortality percentage of prawns fed 1.54% ARA was significantly higher than that of prawns fed 0.28–1.22% ARA. The results suggest that the optimal dietary ARA requirement for juvenile M. nipponense is 0.82% (dry weight) based on second-order regression analysis of weight gain vs. dietary ARA level, and that 0.86% ARA could significantly enhance non-specific immunity of M. nipponense; however, too high a level of ARA will affect the health status of this prawn.
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Key words
Macrobrachium nipponense,Arachidonic acid,Growth performance,Immunity,Toll-like receptor signaling pathway
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