Effect of dietary protein level and source on digestive proteolytic enzyme activity of juvenile Senegalese sole, Solea senegalensis Kaup 1850

Cerrado

Fecha

Autores

Rodiles, Ana
Santigosa, Ester
Herrera, Marcelino
Hachero Cruzado, Ismael
Cordero, María Luisa
Martínez-Llorens, Silvia
Lall, Santosh P.
Alarcón, Francisco Javier

Directores

Unidades organizativas

Handle

https://riunet.upv.es/handle/10251/63337

Cita bibliográfica

Rodiles, A.; Santigosa, E.; Herrera, M.; Hachero Cruzado, I.; Cordero, ML.; Martínez-Llorens, S.; Lall, SP.... (2012). Effect of dietary protein level and source on digestive proteolytic enzyme activity of juvenile Senegalese sole, Solea senegalensis Kaup 1850. Aquaculture International. 20(6):1053-1070. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10499-012-9508-6

Titulación

Resumen

The effect of dietary protein level and protein source on growth and proteolytic activity of juvenile Solea senegalensis was studied. In Experiment 1, fish were fed on four experimental diets containing increased protein levels (36, 46, 56 and 67%). In Experiment 2, Senegalese soles were fed on five diets with partial substitution of fish meal by soybean meal, soybean protein concentrate, soybean protein isolate, wheat gluten meal or pea protein concentrate. Results prove that growth and proteolytic activity in the distal intestine of fish were affected by the quantitative increase in dietary protein. The origin of protein source used in the elaboration of experimental diets affected both the amount and composition of the alkaline proteases secreted into the intestinal lumen; however, it did not decrease animal growth. Juvenile Senegalese sole showed capability to modulate digestive protease secretion when the concentration and/or source of dietary protein were modified. Quantity and quality of dietary protein affected protein hydrolysis in Senegalese sole intestine. This study establishes that 30% fish meal protein can be replaced by soybean derivatives without affecting intestinal proteases. Replacement with wheat gluten meal or pea protein concentrate should be taken cautiously, but further research is needed to establish whether growth performance and digestive enzyme physiology of Senegalese sole are affected by plant protein-supplemented diets in a long-term trial.

Palabras clave

Dietary protein, Digestive proteases, Plant protein sources, Protease inhibitor, Replacement, Senegalese sole, Zymogram

ISSN

0967-6120

ISBN

Fuente

Aquaculture International

DOI

10.1007/s10499-012-9508-6