Body weight of newborn and suckling piglets affects their intestinal gene expression

Author:

Villagómez-Estrada Sandra12,Pérez José F1,Melo-Durán Diego13,Gonzalez-Solè Francesc1,D’Angelo Matilde1,Pérez-Cano Francisco J4,Solà-Oriol David1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Animal and Food Science, Animal Nutrition and Welfare Service (SNIBA), Autonomous University of Barcelona , Bellaterra 08193 , Spain

2. Carrera de Medicina Veterinaria, Escuela Superior Politécnica de Chimborazo (ESPOCH) , Riobamba 060155 , Ecuador

3. Faculty of Medical Sciences “Eugenio Espejo,” UTE University , Quito 17012764 , Ecuador

4. Department of Biochemistry and Physiology, University of Barcelona , Barcelona 08007 , Spain

Abstract

Abstract Modern hyperprolific sows must deal with large litters (16–20 piglets) which reduce piglet birthweight with a concomitant increase in the proportion of small and intrauterine growth retarded piglets. However, larger litters do not only have a greater variation of piglet weights, but also a greater variation in colostrum and milk consumption within the litter. To further understand the impact that body weight has on piglets, the present study aimed to evaluate the degree of physiological weakness of the smallest piglets at birth and during the suckling period (20 d) compared to their middle-weight littermates through their jejunal gene expression. At birth, light piglets showed a downregulation of genes related to immune response (FAXDC2, HSPB1, PPARGC1α), antioxidant enzymes (SOD2m), digestive enzymes (ANPEP, IDO1, SI), and nutrient transporter (SLC39A4) (P < 0.05) but also a tendency for a higher mRNA expression of GBP1 (inflammatory regulator) and HSD11β1 (stress hormone) genes compared to their heavier littermates (P < 0.10). Excluding HSD11β1 gene, all these intestinal gene expression differences initially observed at birth between light and middle-weight piglets were stabilized at the end of the suckling period, when others appeared. Genes involved in barrier function (CLDN1), pro-inflammatory response (CXCL2, IL6, IDO1), and stress hormone signaling (HSD11β1) over-expressed compared to their middle-weight littermates (P < 0.05). In conclusion, at birth and at the end of suckling period, light body weight piglets seem to have a compromised gene expression and therefore impaired nutrient absorption, immune and stress responses compared to their heavier littermates.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science

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