Academic Thesis

Basic information

Name Ouchi Yoshimitsu
Belonging department
Occupation name
researchmap researcher code R000035739
researchmap agency Okayama University of Science

Title

Oral Administration of L-Citrulline Changes Brain Free Amino Acid and Monoamine Metabolism in Heat-Exposed Broiler Chickens

Bibliography Type

 

Author

Vishwajit S. Chowdhury
Guofeng Han
Mohamed Z. Elhussiny
Yoshimitsu Ouchi
Phuong V. Tran
Haruka Nishimura
Shogo Haraguchi
John F. Cockrem
Takashi Bungo
Mitsuhiro Furuse

Summary

High ambient temperatures (HT) in summer are becoming more severe due to global warming, leading to severe adverse effects on poultry production. Recently, we have reported that oral administration of L-citrulline (L-Cit) can minimize hyperthermia in chickens under HT. However, whether oral L-Cit can enter the brain, the center for thermoregulation, has not been studied. We investigated the effects of oral administration of L-Cit on free amino acids and monoamines in the diencephalon region of the brain of heat-exposed broilers. Broilers were treated with L-Cit (40 mmol/20 ml/bird), then moved to a chamber at HT (30 ± 1°C) or to a thermoneutral temperature (CT: 22 ± 1°C) chamber for 2 h. Control groups were given methyl cellulose solution and placed in the CT or HT chambers. After 2 h of exposure to HT, there were increased brain concentrations of Cit in comparison with concentrations in broilers exposed to CT, whereas brain ornithine (Orn) concentrations were decreased, and arginine (Arg) concentrations were not changed. Interestingly, oral administration of L-Cit increased brain concentration of Cit, Arg, and Orn under both CT and HT. Tryptophan and its metabolite, serotonin (5-HT) concentrations were lower in the brain under HT than under CT. HT did not change brain concentrations of tyrosine, but dopamine (DA, a metabolite of tyrosine) concentrations decreased, and methoxyhydroxyphenylglycol (MHPG, a metabolite of DA) concentrations increased in comparison with CT. Oral administration of L-Cit decreased brain concentrations of both tryptophan and tyrosine under CT and HT without changing 5-HT; however, DA levels declined under HT. Moreover, MHPG concentrations increased. In conclusion, these results suggest that metabolism of amino acids and metabolism of DA can be enhanced in the brain by oral administration of L-Cit. Metabolic changes in the brain in response to oral administration of L-Cit may influence the thermoregulatory center in the brain, leading to a reduction in body temperature and conferring thermotolerance in heat-exposed broiler chickens.

Magazine(name)

Frontiers in Animal Science

Publisher

Frontiers Media {SA}

Volume

3

Number Of Pages

 

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EndingPage

 

Date of Issue

2022-04-05

Referee

Exist

Invited

 

Language

 

Thesis Type

Research papers (academic journals)

ISSN

 

DOI

10.3389/fanim.2022.875572

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DBLP ID