A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius

The pigmentation of black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon is due to astaxanthin, astaxanthin monoester, and astaxanthin diester. These carotenoids are biosynthesized from beta-carotene or zeaxanthin. Biosynthesis is postulated to be mediated by the enzymes C3 and C4 monooxygenase and caroten-4-ol dehyd...

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Main Authors: Heralde, Francisco M., III, Leaño, Milagros, Reyes, Angelita, Coloso, Relicardo
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Published: Animo Repository 1994
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Online Access:https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/7380
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spelling oai:animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph:faculty_research-81212022-10-19T06:05:25Z A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius Heralde, Francisco M., III Leaño, Milagros Reyes, Angelita Coloso, Relicardo The pigmentation of black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon is due to astaxanthin, astaxanthin monoester, and astaxanthin diester. These carotenoids are biosynthesized from beta-carotene or zeaxanthin. Biosynthesis is postulated to be mediated by the enzymes C3 and C4 monooxygenase and caroten-4-ol dehydrogenase. Blue-shrimp syndrome, characterized by low total astaxanthin levels in shrimp epidermis, is associated with nutritional deficiency for carotenoids but other factors such as high organic matter, hypoxia, high density, and high pH may also be involved. In this study, the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in P. monodon was investigated with respect to retention and transformation of carotenoids and the activity of the enzymes C3 and C4 monooxygenase and caroten-4-ol dehydrogenase.Two tanks were prepared each containing 25 pieces of shrimp fed a control diet (not containing any carotenoid) for two weeks. Shrimps in one tank (Treatment 1) were given beta-carotene supplemented diet (3.8 ppm) in the next two weeks while those in the other (treatment 2) were fed the control diet. Two days after introduction of the test diets, both treatments were subjected to hypoxia challenge (dissolved oxygen, 2.5-2.7 mg/L) and the carotenoid content and profile of feces monitored for succeeding days. Assay of enzyme activity was performed five days after hypoxia challenge. Results showed a ten-fold increase in fecal total carotenoid content of shrimps in treatment 2 (122.2 ppm) compared with that in treatment 1 (12.4 ppm) on hypoxia challenge and restores to basal level (3.9-4.1 ppm) after three days. The carotenoids found in the feces of shrimps in treatment 2 were astaxanthin, astaxanthin monoester, astaxanthin diesters, and an unidentified carotenoid which was also found in the muscle of stressed shrimp. Using beta-carotene as substrate, conversion to astaxanthin was not observed in the hepatopancreas homogenates of shrimps in both treatments. Instead, a slow conversion of astaxanthin to betacarotene (i.e., a reverse reaction) was noted in treatment 2 exhibiting twice the activity in treatment 1. Radiolabelling studies using 14C-labelled astaxanthin as substrate confirmed the existence of this enzyme-mediated reductive pathway from astaxanthin which occurs at a very slow rate. This study demonstrated the carotenoid-depleting effect of hypoxia on shrimp, both through enhanced fecal release and moderately elevated reductive pathway from astaxanthin. This effect suggests a possible mechanism by which blue-shrimp syndrome may develop. 1994-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/7380 Faculty Research Work Animo Repository Penaeus monodon—Metabolism Hypoxia (Water) Pigments (Biology) Biology
institution De La Salle University
building De La Salle University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider De La Salle University Library
collection DLSU Institutional Repository
topic Penaeus monodon—Metabolism
Hypoxia (Water)
Pigments (Biology)
Biology
spellingShingle Penaeus monodon—Metabolism
Hypoxia (Water)
Pigments (Biology)
Biology
Heralde, Francisco M., III
Leaño, Milagros
Reyes, Angelita
Coloso, Relicardo
A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius
description The pigmentation of black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon is due to astaxanthin, astaxanthin monoester, and astaxanthin diester. These carotenoids are biosynthesized from beta-carotene or zeaxanthin. Biosynthesis is postulated to be mediated by the enzymes C3 and C4 monooxygenase and caroten-4-ol dehydrogenase. Blue-shrimp syndrome, characterized by low total astaxanthin levels in shrimp epidermis, is associated with nutritional deficiency for carotenoids but other factors such as high organic matter, hypoxia, high density, and high pH may also be involved. In this study, the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in P. monodon was investigated with respect to retention and transformation of carotenoids and the activity of the enzymes C3 and C4 monooxygenase and caroten-4-ol dehydrogenase.Two tanks were prepared each containing 25 pieces of shrimp fed a control diet (not containing any carotenoid) for two weeks. Shrimps in one tank (Treatment 1) were given beta-carotene supplemented diet (3.8 ppm) in the next two weeks while those in the other (treatment 2) were fed the control diet. Two days after introduction of the test diets, both treatments were subjected to hypoxia challenge (dissolved oxygen, 2.5-2.7 mg/L) and the carotenoid content and profile of feces monitored for succeeding days. Assay of enzyme activity was performed five days after hypoxia challenge. Results showed a ten-fold increase in fecal total carotenoid content of shrimps in treatment 2 (122.2 ppm) compared with that in treatment 1 (12.4 ppm) on hypoxia challenge and restores to basal level (3.9-4.1 ppm) after three days. The carotenoids found in the feces of shrimps in treatment 2 were astaxanthin, astaxanthin monoester, astaxanthin diesters, and an unidentified carotenoid which was also found in the muscle of stressed shrimp. Using beta-carotene as substrate, conversion to astaxanthin was not observed in the hepatopancreas homogenates of shrimps in both treatments. Instead, a slow conversion of astaxanthin to betacarotene (i.e., a reverse reaction) was noted in treatment 2 exhibiting twice the activity in treatment 1. Radiolabelling studies using 14C-labelled astaxanthin as substrate confirmed the existence of this enzyme-mediated reductive pathway from astaxanthin which occurs at a very slow rate. This study demonstrated the carotenoid-depleting effect of hypoxia on shrimp, both through enhanced fecal release and moderately elevated reductive pathway from astaxanthin. This effect suggests a possible mechanism by which blue-shrimp syndrome may develop.
format text
author Heralde, Francisco M., III
Leaño, Milagros
Reyes, Angelita
Coloso, Relicardo
author_facet Heralde, Francisco M., III
Leaño, Milagros
Reyes, Angelita
Coloso, Relicardo
author_sort Heralde, Francisco M., III
title A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius
title_short A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius
title_full A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius
title_fullStr A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius
title_full_unstemmed A preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp Penaeus monodon fabricius
title_sort preliminary study on the effect of hypoxia on carotenoid metabolism in black tiger shrimp penaeus monodon fabricius
publisher Animo Repository
publishDate 1994
url https://animorepository.dlsu.edu.ph/faculty_research/7380
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