Abstract

Simple SummaryAvailability of dietary fat and oil is important to broiler chicken due to their rapid growth rate. Therefore, we conducted an experiment with dietary sophorolipid, a glycolipid-type emulsifier, to investigate growth, lipid digestion markers and gut health during the growing period. Growth was accelerated by dietary sophorolipid supplementation through upregulation of lipid digestion and absorption markers. Additionally, dietary sophorolipid also increased the surface area of the gut and modulated microbial population and short-chain fatty acid concentration. Collectively, this study proposed that sophorolipid addition in feed could enhance chicken’s growth by increased intestinal absorption of dietary lipid and improved gut microenvironments. Dietary fat and oil could aid in reaching the high-energy requirements of fast-growing birds; however, these inclusions could lead to nutrient waste. This is because young birds have limited lipid digestion due to the low secretion of lipase and bile salt. Sophorolipid (SPL), a glycolipid emulsifier with lower toxicity and higher biodegradability, can upregulate fat utilization by increasing digestibility. Accordingly, a five-week-long experiment was conducted with 720 one-day-old chicks (Ross 308) to investigate the effects of dietary SPL on growth, organ characteristics, and gut health. The allotment was partitioned into four treatment groups according to their body weight with six replications (30 chick/pen). The three treatment diets comprised a basal diet with a formulation that met the Ross 308 standard and 5, 10, and 15 ppm SPL in the basal diet. During the experiment, the birds had free access to feed, and body weight and feed intake were measured at the end of each phase. Chickens were put down at the end of the growing and finishing phases, and jejunum and cecal samples were obtained to investigate organ characteristics and gut environments. The data were analyzed using the generalized linear model procedures of SAS 9.4, and all data were assessed for linear, quadratic, and cubic effects of dietary SPL-supplemented dosages. Body weight was significantly increased with 10 ppm of SPL supplementation in the grower phase without affecting feed efficiency. The relative weights of the intestine and the bursa of Fabricius were quadratically decreased by SPL supplementation with a lower population of Streptococcus and higher propionate and butyrate concentrations. Additionally, the dietary SPL supplementation groups showed a significantly increased villus/crypt ratio with higher intestinal expression levels of fatty acid translocase, diacylglycerol acyltransferase 2, and fatty acid transporter 4. Collectively, proper SPL supplementation in the chicken diet could improve growth performance by down-regulating immune modulation and up-regulating lipid digestion and absorption via modulation of gut microenvironments.

Highlights

  • Fat and oil inclusions in the feed formulation of young birds can help meet the highenergy requirements of fast-growing birds [1]

  • One reason is that the supplementation of fat in feed formulation leads to a dramatic increase in feed price, with another being that young broiler chicks have physiological hurdles in lipid digestion due to the low secretion of lipase and bile salts [4,5]

  • At the end of the grower phase, 10 ppm of SPL supplementation could accelerate the body weight of broiler chickens compared to 15 ppm of SPL supplementation (p < 0.05)

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Summary

Introduction

Fat and oil inclusions in the feed formulation of young birds can help meet the highenergy requirements of fast-growing birds [1]. Dietary inclusion of fat could improve feed efficiency and carcass quality by supplying essential fatty acids and vitamins and lowering the passage rate in the gastrointestinal tract [2,3]. One reason is that the supplementation of fat in feed formulation leads to a dramatic increase in feed price, with another being that young broiler chicks have physiological hurdles in lipid digestion due to the low secretion of lipase and bile salts [4,5]. Demonstrated that 0.5 and 1.0 mL/kg of dietary bile salt supplementation could improve growth performance, blood biochemical markers, gut enzyme activities, digestibility of nutrients, and microbial population [6]. Dietary single enzyme supplementation is hard to maximize the lipid digestibility, due to the complex fat digestion process, as it includes breakdown of the fat droplet, emulsification, lipolysis, and micelle formation [7]

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