Abstract

Examine the effect of soy protein concentrate (SPC) on allochthonous microbiota, hindgut integrity, and liver tissue of totoaba (Totoaba macdonaldi). Four diets were prepared: control diet (100% fishmeal) and experimental diets containing partial substitution of fishmeal by SPC (15%, 30% and 45% SPC). After 90days, samples of the hindgut contents were taken to determine the taxonomic composition of the allochthonous microbiota through sequencing of the V3-V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene. Simultaneously, liver and hindgut samples were collected for examination by histological approaches. The SPC modulated the richness and abundance of the accessory microbiota, of which the main operational taxonomic unit showed an increase corresponding to the Phylum Firmicutes (Bacillales and Lactobacillales). With the increase in SPC, a slight decrease in mucosal fold width, a decrease in goblet cells and a slight distortion of the villi in the hindgut were observed. In the liver, SPC was observed to influence hepatocytes morphology through irregular and enlarged nuclei. The study demonstrates that Proteobacteria dominated the allochthonous microbiota of subadult totoaba, regardless of the diet. However, the SPC modulated the accessory bacteria communities and caused slight effects on the liver and gut of fish. To our knowledge, this is the first study that analyses the effects of SPC on allochthonous microbiota of subadults T. macdonaldi through new generation techniques such as DNA sequencing for metagenomic analysis.

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