Abstract

BackgroundThe broiler industry has undergone intense genetic selection over the past 50 yr. resulting in improvements for growth and feed efficiency, however, significant variation remains for performance and growth traits. Production improvements have been coupled with unfavourable metabolic consequences, including immunological trade-offs for growth, and excess fat deposition. To determine whether interactions between fatty acid (FA) metabolism and innate immunity may be associated with performance variations commonly seen within commercial broiler flocks, total carcass lipid %, carcass and blood FA composition, as well as genes involved with FA metabolism, immunity and cellular stress were investigated in male birds of a broiler strain, layer strain and F1 layer × broiler cross at d 14 post hatch. Heterophil: lymphocyte ratios, relative organ weights and bodyweight data were also compared.ResultsBroiler bodyweight (n = 12) was four times that of layers (n = 12) by d 14 and had significantly higher carcass fat percentage compared to the cross (n = 6; P = 0.002) and layers (P = 0.017) which were not significantly different from each other (P = 0.523). The carcass and whole blood FA analysis revealed differences in the FA composition between the three groups indicating altered FA metabolism, despite all being raised on the same diet. Genes associated with FA synthesis and β-oxidation were upregulated in the broilers compared to the layers indicating a net overall increase in FA metabolism, which may be driven by the larger relative liver size as a percentage of bodyweight in the broilers. Genes involved in innate immunity such as TLR2 and TLR4, as well as organelle stress indicators ERN1 and XBP1 were found to be non-significant, with the exception of high expression levels of XBP1 in layers compared to the cross and broilers. Additionally there was no difference in heterophil: lymphocytes between any of the birds.ConclusionsThe results provide evidence that genetic selection may be associated with altered metabolic processes between broilers, layers and their F1 cross. Whilst there is no evidence of interactions between FA metabolism, innate immunity or cellular stress, further investigations at later time points as growth and fat deposition increase would provide useful information as to the effects of divergent selection on key metabolic and immunological processes.

Highlights

  • The broiler industry has undergone intense genetic selection over the past 50 yr. resulting in improvements for growth and feed efficiency, significant variation remains for performance and growth traits

  • At least 85% of production improvements has been attributed to genetic selection with meat production efficiency continually increasing by 2–3% per year through selective breeding programs alone [1, 4]

  • Selection for feed efficiency is largely measured as feed conversion ratio (FCR), the amount of feed intake (FI) per unit bodyweight gain

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Summary

Introduction

The broiler industry has undergone intense genetic selection over the past 50 yr. resulting in improvements for growth and feed efficiency, significant variation remains for performance and growth traits. Over the past 50 yr the intensification (improved housing, husbandry and nutrition) of the broiler industry and concurrent commercial genetic selection for growth, feed efficiency and yield has resulted broiler growth increases in excess of 400% [1], with broilers having the capacity to reach 2 kg of live weight within 35 d post hatch [2, 3]. There still remains significant (>10%) variation in performance traits, including feed efficiency, bodyweight and growth rate within broiler strains [6]. This performance variation can result in an economic cost to both the producer and industry [7]. Variation in live weight is problematic for modern automated processing plants which reject carcasses out of a relatively narrow weight range, requiring further handling and sorting, and can incur economic loss to the processor [7]

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