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Dietary supplement of Enterococcus faecalis on digestive enzyme activities, short‐chain fatty acid production, immune system response and disease resistance of Javanese carp ( Puntius gonionotus, Bleeker 1850)
Author(s) -
Allameh S. K.,
Ringø E.,
Yusoff F. M.,
Daud H. M.,
Ideris A.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aquaculture nutrition
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.941
H-Index - 79
eISSN - 1365-2095
pISSN - 1353-5773
DOI - 10.1111/anu.12397
Subject(s) - aeromonas hydrophila , biology , enterococcus faecalis , food science , aeromonas salmonicida , microbiology and biotechnology , probiotic , immune system , carp , lipase , fatty acid , bacteria , enzyme , biochemistry , fish <actinopterygii> , immunology , fishery , genetics , staphylococcus aureus
This study investigated the effects of Enterococcus faecalis on digestive enzyme activities and short‐chain fatty acid production in fish intestine, resistance against Aeromonas hydrophila and humoral immunity response by 3 experiments on Javanes carp ( Puntius gonionotus ). The experiment 1 revealed that diet supplemented with E. faecalis significantly ( P  < 0.05) increased protease and lipase activities compared to control fed fish. Moreover, E. faecalis supplementation significantly enhanced the production of propionic and butyric acid in the intestine, while no significant difference ( P  > 0.05) in acetic acid production was observed. In the challenge study (experiment 2), fish were injected (intraperitoneal) with 10 7 A. hydrophila per ml and survival was significantly improved when fish were fed diet supplemented with E. faecalis compared to control fish. In experiment 3, dietary E. faecalis affected immune system response as fish fed the probiont and exposed to 10 6 A. hydrophila per ml displayed significantly elevated antibody levels compared to control fed fish. Fish fed diet supplemented with E. faecalis but not exposed to the pathogen revealed significantly higher antibody level than control fish ( P  < 0.05). Therefore, E. faecalis can be used as a probiotic in Javanese carp farming.

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