fbpx
Sign up now!
Don't show this again
Sweepstakes Rules

We’re glad you’re enjoying Poultry Health Today.
Access is free but you’ll need to register to view more content.
Already registered? Sign In
Tap to download the app
X
Share
X
REPORTSCollect articles and features into your own report to read later, print or share with others

Create a New Report

Favorites

Read Later

Create a new report

Report title (required) Brief description (optional)
CREATE
X
NEXT
POULTRY
follow us


You must be logged in to edit your profile.

Sponsored by Zoetis

Sponsored By Zoetis

.
Playicon

Trial shows glutamine aids gut health in broilers raised without antibiotics

Glutamine has traditionally been considered a non-essential amino acid in broiler diets, but it may be more essential than first realized, Jared Oxford, a graduate research assistant at the University of Georgia, told Poultry Health Today.

In humans and other species, research has shown that glutamine is “conditionally essential” in times of stress and challenge.

“[Glutamine] is very important for highly prolific cells such as intestinal epithelial cells, T cells, B cells and macrophages,” Oxford explained. “About 30% of the glutamine in the diet is actually used in the gut itself. It’s used as a precursor in the [citric acid] cycle as well as a precursor to glutathione, which is a very important antioxidant.”

Why focus on glutamine?

With the increase in no-antibiotic-ever production, glutamine may serve as a helpful nutrient asset, particularly when birds are under stress. Oxford and his colleagues are researching glutamine and its impact on coccidiosis and necrotic enteritis.

During a coccidiosis infection, birds have to build more intestinal epithelial cells, and glutamine helps with reproduction of those cells, Oxford said, and research has confirmed the theory.

Oxford’s study incorporated three treatments: a 0% glutamine-supplementation group, used as a control; a 0.5% supplementation group; and a 1% supplementation group.

Those supplementations were added to a standard corn-soybean diet. No medications or vaccines were used in the study — researchers were only looking at glutamine.

Birds were challenged with a 20X dose of a coccidiosis vaccine at day 14 to produce a mild coccidiosis infection. Then, 7 days post-challenge, researchers collected jejunum and cecal tonsils for gene expression.

“In the cell tonsil, we looked at CD-4, CD-8 T-cell population percentages, as well as micro and gross lesions for Eimeria Acervulina, Maxima and Tenella,” Oxford said.

There was no difference in body weight, which could be due to a diet that was higher in crude protein (21%, compared to a normal diet at 21 days of about 19% crude protein), Oxford said. There was, however, a big difference in villi-site and crypt-depth ratios.

“When glutamine was supplemented, there were higher villa-site and crypt-depth ratios,” he said. “Better gut health, with lower crypt depths, means less cell turnover.”

Take-away message

In times of high stress, particularly around the 14- and 21-day marks, glutamine can help with gut health and intestinal turnover, Oxford said. Overall, glutamine might be a good insurance policy to put in diets when birds experience stress. However, a more in-depth nutritional study is necessary to see the full effect on body weight, he added.

“Our plan for future research is to look at a necrotic enteritis model. With seeing such a big difference in the tight-junction protein expression, we believe that if that translates to actual tight junctions, there will be less plasma leakage, so therefore, hopefully less necrotic enteritis in the gut,” he said.

In a future study, Oxford will look at how glutamine affects immune acquisition with coccidiosis vaccine.




Posted on July 5, 2019

tags: , , ,
RELATED NEWS



You must be logged in to edit your profile.

Google Translate is provided on this website as a reference tool. However, Poultry Health Today and its sponsor and affiliates do not guarantee in any way the accuracy of the translated content and are not responsible for any event resulting from the use of the translation provided by Google. By choosing a language other than English from the Google Translate menu, the user agrees to withhold all liability and/or damage that may occur to the user by depending on or using the translation by Google.