Amino acid requirements of fish larvae and post-larvae:: new tools and recent findings

被引:105
作者
Conceiçao, LEC
Grasdalen, H
Ronnestad, I
机构
[1] Univ Algarve, CCMAR, P-8000117 Faro, Portugal
[2] Univ Bergen, Dept Zool, N-5007 Bergen, Norway
[3] NTNU, Dept Biotechnol, N-7491 Trondheim, Norway
关键词
amino acid bioavailability; indispensable amino acids; fish larvae; amino acid oxidation; amino acid requirements; ideal amino acid profile;
D O I
10.1016/S0044-8486(03)00505-2
中图分类号
S9 [水产、渔业];
学科分类号
0908 ;
摘要
This paper reviews methodologies and recent findings in the study of the amino acid (AA) metabolism of fish larvae and post-larvae, in order to better understand the AA requirements. The larval indispensable AA (IAA) profile can be used as index of the IAA requirements. When turbot larvae and live food M profiles are compared, the profile of the latter seems to be deficient in some IAA. However, the larval IAA profile is only a rough indicator of AA requirements. A more precise estimate of the ideal dietary IAA profile implies the knowledge of the relative bioavailabilities of the individual AA, in particular, eventual differential rates of absorption and catabolism. Metabolic budgets (including unabsorbed AA, AA oxidation and AA retention) can be estimated using an in vivo method based on controlled tube-feeding of AA mixes containing a C-14-labelled AA. Results with fasted post-larval Senegal sole (Solea senegalensis) and fasted herring (Clupea harengus) larvae show a high retention of labelled doses of IAA (>60%) in the body, compared to catabolism as measured by liberated (CO2)-C-14 (<25%). In contrast, dispensable AA (DAA) show a higher catabolism (>40%) and a lower retention (<57%). So, from the onset of exogenous feeding, fish larvae have high catabolic losses of AA, but use DAA preferentially to IAA as energy substrates. A new method combining the use of C-13-labelled live food and C-13-NMR spectroscopy can be used to study simultaneously the relative bioavailability of several individual AA in fish larvae. In larval gilthead seabream, (Sparus aurata) fed on rotifers, relative bioavailabilities (a combined measure of absorption efficiency and rate of catabolism) vary between AA being high for aspartate, glutamate and lysine and low for threonine. These estimates of relative biovailability of individual AA together with the IAA profiles of the larval seabream indicate that rotifers are deficient in threonine and leucine for larval seabream, threonine being the first limiting AA for protein synthesis. In order to define ideal IAA profiles for larval fish, further studies are needed on the factors affecting the relative bioavailability of IAA, such as species, age, developmental stage, temperature and the dietary nitrogen molecular form(s). Estimates of relative bioavailability of individual AA together with the IAA profile of the larval protein allow to determine the ideal dietary IAA profile for a given species. (C) 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:221 / 232
页数:12
相关论文
共 46 条
[31]  
Osse JWM, 1995, ICES MAR SC, V201, P21
[32]   Diagnosis and follow-up of inborn errors of amino acid metabolism: Use of proton magnetic resonance of biological fluids [J].
Pontoni, G ;
Rotondo, F ;
CarteniFarina, M ;
Zappia, V .
AMINO ACIDS, 1996, 10 (04) :305-315
[33]   Free amino acids are absorbed faster and assimilated more efficiently than protein in postlarval Senegal sole (Solea senegalensis) [J].
Ronnestad, I ;
Conceiçao, LEC ;
Aragao, C ;
Dinis, MT .
JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 2000, 130 (11) :2809-2812
[34]   Assimilation and catabolism of dispensable and indispensable free amino acids in post-larval Senegal sole (Solea senegalensis) [J].
Ronnestad, I ;
Conceiçao, LEC ;
Aragao, C ;
Dinis, MT .
COMPARATIVE BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY C-TOXICOLOGY & PHARMACOLOGY, 2001, 130 (04) :461-466
[35]   In vivo studies of digestion and nutrient assimilation in marine fish larvae [J].
Ronnestad, I ;
Rojas-García, CR ;
Tonheim, SK ;
Conceiçao, LEC .
AQUACULTURE, 2001, 201 (1-2) :161-175
[36]  
Ronnestad Ivar, 1993, P279
[37]  
Roth FX, 1999, J ANIM PHYSIOL AN N, V81, P232
[38]   A NEW METHOD FOR FORCE-FEEDING LARVAL FISH [J].
RUST, MB ;
HARDY, RW ;
STICKNEY, RR .
AQUACULTURE, 1993, 116 (04) :341-352
[39]  
RUST MB, 1995, THESIS U WASHINGTON
[40]   METABOLIC ENZYME-ACTIVITIES IN LARVAE OF THE AFRICAN CATFISH, CLARIAS-GARIEPINUS - CHANGES IN RELATION TO AGE AND NUTRITION [J].
SEGNER, H ;
VERRETH, J .
FISH PHYSIOLOGY AND BIOCHEMISTRY, 1995, 14 (05) :385-398