Abstract

To identify daily changes in the digestive physiology of Totoaba macdonaldi, the feed intake, activity (pepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase, amylase, and L-aminopeptidase), and gene expression (aminopeptidase and maltase-glucoamylase) of key digestive enzymes were measured in the intestine and the pyloric caeca. Fish were fed for three weeks every four hours during the light period to apparent satiation, and samples were taken every four hours throughout a 24-h cycle under a 12:12 L:D photoperiod. The feed consumption steadily increased until the third feeding (16:00 h, ZT-8) and decreased significantly towards the end of the day. The activity of pepsin and alkaline enzymes (trypsin, chymotrypsin, lipase, amylase, and L-aminopeptidase) exhibited a pattern dependent on the presence of feed, showing a significant reduction during the hours of darkness (ZT-12 to ZT-24). Expression of the intestinal brush border enzyme (L-aminopeptidase) increased during the darkness period in anticipation of the feed ingestion associated with the subsequent light period. The cosinor analysis used to estimate the feed rhythms for all tested enzymes showed that activity in the intestine and pyloric caeca exhibited significant rhythmicity (p < 0.05). However, no rhythmicity was observed in the intestinal expression of maltase-glucoamylase. Our results demonstrate that some of the behavioral and digestive physiology features of totoaba directly respond to rhythmicity in feeding, a finding that should be considered when establishing optimized feeding protocols.

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