Abstract

Phytotherapy is based on the use of plants to prevent or treat human and animal diseases. Recently, the use of essential oils and polyphenol-enriched extracts is also rapidly increasing in the aquaculture sector as a means of greater industrial and environmental sustainability. Previous studies assessed the antibacterial and antiparasitic effects of these bioactive compounds on fish. However, studies on the modulation of oxidative stress biomarkers are still scant to date. Thus, in this study, the modulation of antioxidant defense against oxidative stress exerted by fish diets supplemented with a basil supercritical extract (F1-BEO) was assessed in rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss. The F1-BEO extracted with supercritical fluid extraction was added to the commercial feed flour (0.5, 1, 2, 3% w/w) and mixed with fish oil to obtain a suitable compound for pellet preparation. Fish were fed for 30 days. The levels of stress biomarkers such as superoxide dismutase, catalase, glutathione peroxidase, glutathione S-transferase, glutathione reductase, glyoxalase I, glyoxalase II, lactate dehydrogenase, glutathione and malondialdehyde showed a boost in the antioxidant pathway in fish fed with a 0.5% F1-BEO-supplemented diet. Higher F1-BEO supplementation led to a failure of activity of several enzymes and the depletion of glutathione levels. Malondialdehyde concentration suggests a sufficient oxidative stress defense against lipid peroxidation in all experimental groups, except for a 3% F1-BEO-supplemented diet (liver 168.87 ± 38.79 nmol/mg prot; kidney 146.86 ± 23.28 nmol/mg prot), compared to control (liver 127.76 ± 18.15 nmol/mg prot; kidney 98.68 ± 15.65 nmol/mg prot). Our results suggest supplementing F1-BEO in fish diets up to 0.5% to avoid potential oxidative pressure in farmed trout.

Highlights

  • The expansion of aquaculture provides an alternative way to meet rising global demands for fish and currently contributes to 52% of the fish volume consumed [1]

  • The aim of this study was to assess the timecourse modulation of antioxidant defense against oxidative stress exerted by fish diets supplemented with a waste derived from the supercritical fluid extraction of basil (F1-BEO)

  • Approximately 700 g of basil leaves were filled into a steel cylinder equipped with a mesh filter (80 μm) and introduced into the extraction vessel, which was placed in a heating autoclave

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Summary

Introduction

The expansion of aquaculture provides an alternative way to meet rising global demands for fish and currently contributes to 52% of the fish volume consumed [1] For three decades, this food sector has recorded the highest annual growth rate; approximately 10%. The wide use of antimicrobial agents in modern food animal production has led to the emergence of antimicrobial resistance worldwide [3,4] In aquaculture, this has resulted in the emergence of antibiotic-resistant bacteria in aquatic environments, increase in antibiotic resistance in fish pathogens, transfer of resistance determinants to bacteria of land animals and to human pathogens and alterations in the bacterial flora both in sediments and in the water column [4,5]. Ocimum basilicum was effective against Streptococcus agalactiae and Pseudomonas fluorescens, pathogens of particular concern for farmed fish [19]

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