Long-term supplementation of exogenous bile acids enhanced growth efficacy, hematology, non-specific immunity, and intestinal histomorphology, with significant liver dysfunction in Nile tilapia fingerlings
Elsayed A.A. Eldessouki, Gehad E. Elshopakey, Shaymaa Rezk, Mona Elsayed, Ahmed E.A. Mostafa, Samia Elbahnaswy

TL;DR
Adding bile acids to the diet of Nile tilapia fingerlings improved growth and immunity but caused liver damage over 16 weeks.
Contribution
This study reveals the long-term effects of bile acid supplementation on both beneficial and harmful outcomes in Nile tilapia.
Findings
Bile acid supplementation improved growth, digestion, and immunity in Nile tilapia.
Supplementation increased intestinal health and altered gut microbiota composition.
Prolonged use of bile acids caused significant liver dysfunction and oxidative stress.
Abstract
A 16-week feeding trial was conducted to examine the effects of dietary exogenous bile acids (BAs) on growth performance, digestive enzyme activities, biochemical indices, antioxidant capacity, non-specific immune response, gene expression of proinflammatory cytokines, and liver and intestinal morphology in Nile tilapia (initial weight, 5.10 ± 0.22 g) reared in earthen ponds over an extended period. Two isonitrogenous (31.65% protein) and isolipidic (4.71%) experimental diets were formulated by adding a control diet (BA0) and 0.25 g bile acid per kg diet (BA0.25), respectively. The diets were randomly assigned to 6 hapas, each stocked with 20 fish and fed for 16 weeks. Supplementing with BA0.25 significantly enhanced growth metrics and intestinal digestive enzyme activities compared to BA0. Hematological analysis showed increased levels of white blood cells (WBC), lymphocytes, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAquaculture disease management and microbiota · Aquaculture Nutrition and Growth · Animal Nutrition and Physiology
