Animals (Feb 2024)

Effects of Dietary Supplementation with Tea Residue on Growth Performance, Digestibility, and Diarrhea in Piglets

  • Chunfeng Wang,
  • Yan Zhong,
  • Han Liu,
  • Hanmin Wang,
  • Yali Li,
  • Qiye Wang,
  • Jianzhong Li,
  • Pengfei Huang,
  • Huansheng Yang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani14040584
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. 584

Abstract

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Thirty-six healthy 21-day-old weaned ternary piglets (Duroc × Landrace × Yorkshire) were randomly divided into two treatments with 18 replicates per treatment and one pig per replicate. The control group was fed with a basal diet and the test group was fed with diets supplemented with 1 kg/t tea residue. The test period was 28 days. The results are as follows: The addition of tea residue in the diet had no significant effect on the growth performance of weaned piglets (p > 0.05), but it could significantly reduce the diarrhea rate of piglets from 1 to 7 days and 1 to 28 days (p p > 0.05) but increased the content of glutathione in plasma (p p > 0.05), but it could significantly reduce the content of chloride ions in feces (p TMEM16A and CFTR mRNA in the colon of weaned piglets (p > 0.05). The whole-cell patch clamp recording showed that the TMEM16A and CFTR ion channels could be activated by ionomycin and forskolin, respectively. However, when HT-29 cells transfected with TMEM16A and CFTR channels were treated with tea residue extract, it could significantly inhibit the chloride current of the TMEM16A and CFTR ion channels (p < 0.05).

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