Abstract

In vivo effects of graded dietary levels of arginine on the body and lymphoid organs were investigated using Cornell K strain chickens of the B15/B15 haplotype. Two-week-old birds were fed an arginine-deficient basal diet (0.53% arginine) supplemented with additional arginine (up to 1.0% L-arginine to the diet). At four weeks of age, body weight, lymphoid organ weight, and concentrations of amino acids in plasma were measured. Arginine supplementation produced significant increases in plasma arginine (from 200 nM in chicks fed the basal diet to 2,000 nM in chicks receiving the 1.5% arginine diet) and ornithine concentrations (from 17 nM in chicks fed the basal diet to 500 nM in chicks receiving the 1.5% arginine diet). The arginine-deficient diet reduced body weight gain (P < 0.0001) and thymus, spleen, and bursa of Fabricius weights (P < 0.05). In contrast to the bursa weight, the thymus and spleen weights, as percentages of body weight, were also decreased (P < 0.05). This study suggests that arginine markedly influences lymphoid organ development, with a more pronounced effect on the thymus and spleen than on the bursa of Fabricius.

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