![]() Six isonitrogenous and isocaloric diets (50% crude protein and 17.7 kJ g−1 gross energy) were formulated to contain graded levels of arginine including 1.42, 1.88, 2.22, 2.54, 3.08 and 3.43% of diet (2.84–6.86% of dietary protein), and fed triplicate groups of fish (13.3 ± 0.2 g) to apparent satiation twice daily. At the end of the feeding trial, fish fed ≥2.22% arginine showed significantly (P b 0.05) higher growth than those fed 1.42% arginine. ![]() Significant improvement in protein productive value was found at dietary arginine level of 2.54% compared to the fish fed 1.42% arginine. Significant reductions in whole-body and muscle lipid contents were found by increment of arginine level and whole-body protein increased significantly in fish fed 2.22–2.54% arginine compared to those fed 1.42% arginine. Plasma total protein level significantly was increased in fish fed 2.54–3.08% arginine, and alanine aminotransferase activity and glucose level were significantly decreased in fish fed 2.22–2.54% and ≥1.88% arginine, respectively, compared to the group fed 1.42% arginine. Significant improvements in lysozyme and myeloperoxidase activities and total immunoglobulin level were obtained by dietary arginine increment. Also, significantly higher total nitric oxide synthase activity was recorded at 3.08% arginine level in comparison to 1.42% arginine. A broken-line regression analysis on weight gain showed that the optimum dietary arginine level is 2.37% of diet (4.74% of dietary protein)Ĭhanges in digestive enzyme activity and histology were studied in Atractosteus tropicus embryos, larvae and juvenile periods.
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