BMC Veterinary Research (Oct 2024)
Immune protective, stress indicators, antioxidant, histopathological status, and heat shock protein gene expression impacts of dietary Bacillus spp. against heat shock in Nile tilapia, Oreochromis niloticus
Abstract
Abstract This research evaluated the efficacy of mixed Bacillus strains probiotic supplements in mitigating acute thermal-induced stress in Nile tilapia (Oreochromis niloticus). Three experimental fish groups involved 135 Nile tilapia (49 ± 2 g); one control (no added probiotics), 0.5, and 1% of selected Bacillus strains (B. subtilis, B. licheniformis, and B. pumilus) for 58 days. After the feeding period, growth parameters, immunological parameters, stress biochemical markers, and antioxidant parameters in addition to genes related to stress and histopathological changes in fish, were assessed; subsequently subjected to heat shock at 36 ± 0.5 ◦C for 2 h. Before the heat challenge, our results exhibited a marked increase in the growth efficacy (P 0.05). When Nile tilapia was exposed to heat stress, supplementation with Bacillus probiotic in the diet significantly decreased most of the indices related to serum biochemical (ALT (P < 0.01; P < 0.001), AST (P < 0.01), LDH (P < 0.01), urea (P < 0.05), and creatinine (P < 0.01)), triglycerides (P < 0.001; (P < 0.01)), cholesterol (P < 0.01; (P < 0.05)), glucose (P < 0.001), and cortisol (P < 0.01; (P < 0.05)), with tissue oxidative stress MDA levels (P < 0.05), and HSP70 mRNA expression (P < 0.01; P < 0.001), aligned with the stressed control group. In addition, a notable upsurge in the total protein, albumin, globulin, phagocytic and ROS activities, and total Ig, as well as the enzymatic antioxidant ability (SOD, CAT) (P < 0.01), with GST and GPx mRNA expression (P < 0.05; P < 0.01), were shown in fish-fed Bacillus spp. post-exposure compared with the stressed control group. Besides, no histopathological alterations were revealed in the spleen and brain of fish pre- and post-heat exposure. According to our findings, diet supplementation of Bacillus species has the potential to combat the suppressive effects of heat shock in Nile tilapia.
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