101. Correlation analysis of muscle amino acid deposition and gut microbiota profile of broilers reared at different ambient temperatures
- Author
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Zhiyong Zhao, Yuting Yang, Jianping Liu, Huan Gao, Li Ma, Hongbin Pan, Meiquan Li, Zhenhui Cao, Xing Li, and Yingying Qiao
- Subjects
Physiology ,Fecal Microbiota Composition ,Phenylalanine ,Article ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Genetics ,Food science ,Tyrosine ,030304 developmental biology ,chemistry.chemical_classification ,0303 health sciences ,Ambient Temperature ,Methionine ,Amino Acid Deposition ,General Veterinary ,biology ,Broiler ,0402 animal and dairy science ,04 agricultural and veterinary sciences ,Nonruminant Nutrition and Feed Processing ,biology.organism_classification ,Parabacteroides ,040201 dairy & animal science ,Amino acid ,QL1-991 ,chemistry ,Animal Science and Zoology ,Stenotrophomonas ,Isoleucine ,Leucine ,Zoology ,Food Science - Abstract
Objective: Temperature could influence protein and amino acid deposition as well as gut microbiota profile and composition. However, the specific effects of ambient temperature on amino acids deposition and gut microbiota composition remain insufficiently understood.Methods: A total of 300 one-day-old Avian broilers were randomly divided into three groups and reared at high, medium, and low temperature (HT, MT, and LT), respectively. Breast muscle and fecal samples were collected for amino acid composition analysis and 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis.Results: Our data showed that compared to the MT group, there was a decrease of muscle leucine and tyrosine (pTuricibacter and Parabacteroides was increased in the HT group (pPandoraea, Achromobacter, Prevotella, Brevundimonas, and Stenotrophomonas in the LT group were higher than those in the MT group (pParabacteroides was positively correlated with methionine (pAchromobacter and arginine, isoleucine or tyrosine; between Prevotella and cysteine or phenylalanine; between Brevundimonas and cysteine; and between Stenotrophomonas and cysteine as well as a negative correlation between Stenotrophomonas and serine.Conclusion: Our findings demonstrated that amino acid content of breast muscle and intestinal microbiota profile was affected by different ambient temperatures. Under heat exposure, augmented abundance of Parabacteroides was correlated with elevated methionine. Low temperature treatment may affect muscle tyrosine content through the regulation of Achromobacter.
- Published
- 2020