Toxins (Sep 2020)

The Assessment of Diet Contaminated with Aflatoxin B<sub>1</sub> in Juvenile Turbot (<i>Scophthalmus maximus</i>) and the Evaluation of the Efficacy of Mitigation of a Yeast Cell Wall Extract

  • Jinzhu Yang,
  • Tiantian Wang,
  • Gang Lin,
  • Mingzhu Li,
  • Ronghua Zhu,
  • Alexandros Yiannikouris,
  • Yanjiao Zhang,
  • Kangsen Mai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/toxins12090597
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 9
p. 597

Abstract

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This study aimed to investigate the effects of dietary AFB1 on growth performance, health, intestinal microbiota communities and AFB1 tissue residues of turbot and evaluate the mitigation efficacy of yeast cell wall extract, Mycosorb® (YCWE) toward AFB1 contaminated dietary treatments. Nine experimental diets were formulated: Diet 1 (control): AFB1 free; Diets 2–5 or Diets 6–9: 20 μg AFB1/kg diet or 500 μg AFB1/kg diet + 0%, 0.1%, 0.2%, or 0.4% YCWE, respectively). The results showed that Diet 6 significantly decreased the concentrations of TP, GLB, C3, C4, T-CHO, TG but increased the activities of AST, ALT in serum, decreased the expressions of CAT, SOD, GPx, CYP1A but increased the expressions of CYP3A, GST-ζ1, p53 in liver. Diet 6 increased the AFB1 residues in serum and muscle, altered the intestinal microbiota composition, decreased the bacterial community diversity and the abundance of some potential probiotics. However, Diet 8 and Diet 9 restored the immune response, relieved adverse effects in liver, lowered the AFB1 residues in turbot tissues, promoted intestinal microbiota diversity and lowered the abundance of potentially pathogens. In conclusion, YCWE supplementation decreased the health effects of AFB1 on turbot, restoring biomarkers closer to the mycotoxin-free control diet.

Keywords