Organic cranberry pomace and its ethanolic extractives as feed supplement in broiler : impacts on serum Ig titers, liver and bursal immunity

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2020.09.044

Language of the publication
English
Date
2020-09-29
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Das, Quail
  • Tang, Joshua
  • Yin, Xianhua
  • Ross, Kelly
  • Warriner, Keith
  • Marcone, Massimo F.
  • Diarra, Moussa S.
Publisher
Elsevier

Abstract

With the pressure to reduce antibiotics use in poultry production, cost-effective alternative products need to be developed to enhance the bird's immunity. The present study evaluated the efficacy of cranberry fruit by-products to modulate immunity in broiler chickens. Broiler Cobb 500 chicks were fed a control basal diet, basal diet supplemented with bacitracin (BACI, 55 ppm), cranberry pomace at 1% and 2% (CP2), or cranberry pomace ethanolic extract at 150 and 300 ppm (COH300) for 30 d. Blood sera were analyzed at days 21 and 28 of age for Ig levels by ELISA. The innate and adaptive immune-related gene expression levels in the liver and bursa of Fabricius were investigated at 21 d of age by quantitative polymerase chain reaction arrays. At day 21, the highest IgY level was found in the blood serum of the CP2-fed birds. In the liver, 13 of the 22 differentially expressed genes were downregulated across all treatments compared with the control. Expression of genes belonging to innate immunity such as caspase 1 apoptosis–related cysteine peptidase, chemokine receptor 5, interferon gamma, myeloid differentiation primary response gene 88, and Toll-like receptor 3 were significantly downregulated mainly in BACI- and COH300-fed birds. In the bursa, 5 of 9 genes associated with the innate immunity were differentially expressed. The expression of anti-inflammatory IL-10 gene was upregulated in all treatment groups in bursa compared with the control. The expression of transferrin gene was significantly upregulated in livers of birds fed COH300 and in bursa of birds fed BACI, indicating feeding practices and organ-dependant modulation of this gene in broiler. Overall results of this study showed that cranberry product feed supplementation modulated the innate immune and suppressed proinflammatory cytokines in broilers, providing a platform for future investigations to develop berry products in poultry feeding.

Description

Published online in 2020. Published in print in 2021.

Subject

  • Agriculture,
  • Health and safety

Keywords

  • Broilers (Chickens)--Immunology,
  • Poulets à griller--Immunologie,
  • Canneberges,
  • Cranberries,
  • Antibiotiques en médecine vétérinaire,
  • Antibiotics in veterinary medicine,
  • Compléments alimentaires

Rights

Pagination

517-526

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
0032-5791

Article

Journal title
Poultry Science
Journal volume
100
Journal issue
2
Accepted date
2020-09-11
Submitted date
2020-05-29

Citation(s)

Das, Q., Tang, J., Yin, X., Ross, K., Warriner, K., Marcone, M. F., & Diarra, M. S. (2021). Organic cranberry pomace and its ethanolic extractives as feed supplement in broiler : impacts on serum Ig titers, liver and bursal immunity. Poultry Science, 100(2), 517-526. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2020.09.044

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Collection(s)

Animals and insects

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