Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens

This study investigated the effects of dietary tyrosine or tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after antigen challenge. Chickens were given 0.1%, 0.5% or 1% supplemental dietary L-tyrosine or L-tryptophan prior to the injection of sheep red blood cells (SRBC). Th...

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Main Author: Zhu, Jiangtao
Other Authors: Animal and Poultry Sciences
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46001
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11242009-020137/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-460012021-05-15T05:26:38Z Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens Zhu, Jiangtao Animal and Poultry Sciences LD5655.V855 1991.Z49 Chickens Tyrosine This study investigated the effects of dietary tyrosine or tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after antigen challenge. Chickens were given 0.1%, 0.5% or 1% supplemental dietary L-tyrosine or L-tryptophan prior to the injection of sheep red blood cells (SRBC). The 0.1% tyrosine supplementation increased primary IgM and secondary IgG titers at some time periods in Leghorns and decreased secondary IgM titers at Day 5 in broilers, while 0.1% tryptophan addition decreased Leghorn secondary IgM titers and increased secondary IgG titers at Day 9 and broiler secondary IgM titers at Day 9. The phytohemagglutinin (PHA) wattle response in Leghorns and broilers and resistance of Leghorns to E. coli challenge were not affected with the 0.1% supplemental level. With higher levels, 0.5% tyrosine supplementation increased Leghorn primary IgM titers at Day 11. In broilers, 0.5 and 1% tryptophan supplementation decreased secondary total antibody titers at Day 2, while the secondary IgM titers at Day 6 with the 0.5% tyrosine supplementation were higher than those with 1% tyrosine or tryptophan supplementation. The 0.5% or 1% tryptophan supplementation also lowered stressed broiler primary IgM titers at Day 3. After pooling the titer results within two dietary supplemental levels (0.5% and 1%) of a given amino acid, the tyrosine treatment appeared to suppress antibody response in unstressed broilers, but not stressed ones, while tryptophan displayed a suppressive trend in broilers under both situations. Supplementation with 0.5% or 1% dietary tyrosine did not alter brain catecholamine or serotonin (5-HT) levels in Leghorns. In contrast, 0.5% or 1% dietary tryptophan supplementation generally increased 5-HT, and its metabolite 5-HIIAA, and S-HIAA/5-HT ratios in the diencephalon, telecephalon, and brain stem in Leghorns. Tryptophan supplementation caused a dose-response increase in S-IIT and S-IHIAA levels of the brain stem. The results demonstrated that 0.5-1% dietary tryptophan supplementation suppressed broiler, but not Leghorn, antibody response, and the mechanism was probably via enhancing 5-IIT synthesis and release. The results also suggested that lower levels (0.1-0.5%) of dietary tyrosine supplementation may enhance immune response in Leghorns and stressed broilers, but ingesting large quantity of tyrosine, occurred in broilers, suppresses the response. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:50:35Z 2014-03-14T21:50:35Z 1991 2009-11-24 2009-11-24 2009-11-24 Thesis Text etd-11242009-020137 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46001 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11242009-020137/ en OCLC# 24622655 LD5655.V855_1991.Z49.pdf ix, 110 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1991.Z49
Chickens
Tyrosine
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1991.Z49
Chickens
Tyrosine
Zhu, Jiangtao
Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens
description This study investigated the effects of dietary tyrosine or tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after antigen challenge. Chickens were given 0.1%, 0.5% or 1% supplemental dietary L-tyrosine or L-tryptophan prior to the injection of sheep red blood cells (SRBC). The 0.1% tyrosine supplementation increased primary IgM and secondary IgG titers at some time periods in Leghorns and decreased secondary IgM titers at Day 5 in broilers, while 0.1% tryptophan addition decreased Leghorn secondary IgM titers and increased secondary IgG titers at Day 9 and broiler secondary IgM titers at Day 9. The phytohemagglutinin (PHA) wattle response in Leghorns and broilers and resistance of Leghorns to E. coli challenge were not affected with the 0.1% supplemental level. With higher levels, 0.5% tyrosine supplementation increased Leghorn primary IgM titers at Day 11. In broilers, 0.5 and 1% tryptophan supplementation decreased secondary total antibody titers at Day 2, while the secondary IgM titers at Day 6 with the 0.5% tyrosine supplementation were higher than those with 1% tyrosine or tryptophan supplementation. The 0.5% or 1% tryptophan supplementation also lowered stressed broiler primary IgM titers at Day 3. After pooling the titer results within two dietary supplemental levels (0.5% and 1%) of a given amino acid, the tyrosine treatment appeared to suppress antibody response in unstressed broilers, but not stressed ones, while tryptophan displayed a suppressive trend in broilers under both situations. Supplementation with 0.5% or 1% dietary tyrosine did not alter brain catecholamine or serotonin (5-HT) levels in Leghorns. In contrast, 0.5% or 1% dietary tryptophan supplementation generally increased 5-HT, and its metabolite 5-HIIAA, and S-HIAA/5-HT ratios in the diencephalon, telecephalon, and brain stem in Leghorns. Tryptophan supplementation caused a dose-response increase in S-IIT and S-IHIAA levels of the brain stem. The results demonstrated that 0.5-1% dietary tryptophan supplementation suppressed broiler, but not Leghorn, antibody response, and the mechanism was probably via enhancing 5-IIT synthesis and release. The results also suggested that lower levels (0.1-0.5%) of dietary tyrosine supplementation may enhance immune response in Leghorns and stressed broilers, but ingesting large quantity of tyrosine, occurred in broilers, suppresses the response. === Master of Science
author2 Animal and Poultry Sciences
author_facet Animal and Poultry Sciences
Zhu, Jiangtao
author Zhu, Jiangtao
author_sort Zhu, Jiangtao
title Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens
title_short Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens
title_full Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens
title_fullStr Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after SRBC injections in chickens
title_sort effects of dietary tyrosine and tryptophan supplementation on immunity and brain neurotransmitter levels after srbc injections in chickens
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/46001
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-11242009-020137/
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