Impact of sanitary conditions and dietary amino acids on behaviour and brain monoamine levels in piglets
Ilaria Minussi, Walter J.J. Gerrits, Alfons J.M. Jansman, George Troupakis, Marlies Diepeveen-de Bruin, Yannick Vermeiren, J. Elizabeth Bolhuis

TL;DR
Poor hygiene in piglets lowers brain chemicals linked to behavior, and dietary choices don't counteract these effects.
Contribution
This study reveals how poor hygiene and amino acid diets affect piglet brain chemistry and behavior.
Findings
Low sanitary conditions reduced brain tryptophan and monoamine levels in piglets.
Piglets in poor hygiene showed less play behavior and more damaging behaviors.
Dietary choice had limited impact on mitigating the effects of poor hygiene.
Abstract
Immune activation due to poor hygienic conditions may affect behaviour, as the immune system and brain are linked through several mechanisms. This putative effect may partly result from increased amino acid (AA) metabolism, affecting brain monoamine levels. As pigs can select a diet that meets their AA requirements, offering them the choice between an AA deficient and AA enriched diet may influence the effects of sanitary conditions on brain neurochemistry and behaviour. We investigated the behavioural and neurochemical effects of high (HSC) vs. low (LSC) sanitary conditions on pigs with or without a choice to select between two diets differing in AA concentration in a 2x2 factorial experiment. Female pair-housed piglets (n = 48) were kept under HSC or LSC and were offered either a diet deficient in eight indispensable AA or the choice between the deficient diet and a diet enriched…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDermatology and Skin Diseases · Animal Behavior and Welfare Studies · Olfactory and Sensory Function Studies
