Zhibin Wu, Kailong Yan, Jing Li, Zhongyu Zhang, Yang He, Erlong Wang, Gaoxue Wang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Herbal medicines offer a natural and safe alternative to antibiotics, functioning as immunostimulants to enhance immune responses, growth performance, and disease resistance in aquaculture species. This study investigated the efficacy of dietary sanguinarine (SA), a quaternary benzophenanthridine alkaloid, in augmenting immunity and protecting largemouth bass (Micropterus salmoides) against Aeromonas dhakensis infection. In vitro assays determined the potent antibacterial activity of SA against A. dhakensis, with a minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of 5 μg/mL and a minimum bactericidal concentration (MBC) of 10 μg/mL Time-kill curve analysis further confirmed SA's concentration- and time-dependent bactericidal effects. For the in vivo study, fish were fed diets supplemented with SA at three concentrations: 10 mg/kg (Diet A, low), 30 mg/kg (Diet B, medium), and 50 mg/kg (Diet C, high) for 7 days prior to intraperitoneal challenge with A. dhakensis (1 × 107 CFU/mL). Serum analysis revealed significant enhancements (P < 0.05) in innate immune parameters in SA-fed groups compared with the control group (0 mg/kg SA). Specifically, fish receiving Diets B and C exhibited significantly elevated glutathione (GSH) levels and superoxide dismutase (SOD) activity. Serum acid phosphatase (ACP) and alkaline phosphatase (AKP) activities were also significantly increased, particularly in the Diet C group. Quantitative RT-PCR analysis of spleen tissue demonstrated that dietary SA significantly upregulated the expression of key immune-related genes (TGF-β, IL-10, MYD88, TNF-α, TLR2, IgM) in a dose-dependent manner. Furthermore, dietary SA supplementation significantly reduced bacterial load within the liver tissue post-challenge. Crucially, challenge tests demonstrated a pronounced dose-dependent increase in survival: survival rates were 55 %, 75 %, and 90 % in the Diet A, Diet B, and Diet C groups as compared with the control group (45 %). Collectively, these findings demonstrate that SA is an effective dietary immunostimulant for largemouth bass. It significantly enhances both innate and adaptive immune responses, improves antioxidant capacity, and confers substantial dose-dependent protection against A. dhakensis infection.
期刊介绍:
Fish and Shellfish Immunology rapidly publishes high-quality, peer-refereed contributions in the expanding fields of fish and shellfish immunology. It presents studies on the basic mechanisms of both the specific and non-specific defense systems, the cells, tissues, and humoral factors involved, their dependence on environmental and intrinsic factors, response to pathogens, response to vaccination, and applied studies on the development of specific vaccines for use in the aquaculture industry.