Effect of fasting or feeding diets containing different levels of protein or amino acids on the activities of the liver amino acid-degrading enzymes and amino acid oxidation in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

Autor: Clyde H. Amundson, Terrence B. Kayes, Kyu-Il Kim, Thom W. Grimshaw
Rok vydání: 1992
Předmět:
Zdroj: Aquaculture. 107:89-105
ISSN: 0044-8486
Popis: Experiments were done on fingerling rainbow trout at 15 ± 1 °C to determine the effect of: (1) fasting or feeding diets containing different levels of protein on liver glutamate dehydrogenase (GDH), alanine aminotransferase (AAT) and histidase activities; (2) dietary protein level on the oxidation rates of glutamate and phenylalanine in vivo; and ( 3 ) dietary phenylalanine level on the phenylalanine oxidation rate in vivo. Activities of GDH and AAT per g liver or per g protein were higher (P The oxidation rates of dietary glutamate and phenylalanine in trout that had previously been fed the 35% protein diet, were about three and five times those found in fish previously fed the 10% protein diet, respectively. This difference was found when fish that had been fed the 10 or 35% protein diet were subsequently fed the 35% protein diet containing14C-labeled glutamate or phenylalanine, indicating that trout previously fed a high protein diet have a greater capacity to catabolize these amino acids. The oxidation rate of dietary glutamate was approximately five or nine times that of phenylalanine in trout fed diets containing 35 or 10% protein, respectively. The rate of phenylalanine oxidation increased with increasing phenylalanine levels in the diet; no break point or plateau in the dose-response curve was observed. Our studies demonstrated that fasting or feeding a high protein diet increases the amino acid catabolism in trout, and suggested that the amino acid oxidation technique cannot be used to determine the amino acid requirements of trout.
Databáze: OpenAIRE