Investigation of the probiotic effects of Lactobacillus sakei 2–3 and Candida zeylanoides Y12‑3 strains in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss, Walbaum 1792)
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Date
2025-02-13
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Aquaculture International
Abstract
This study aimed to assess individual and combined effects of candidate probiotic strains
C. zeylanoides Y12-3 and L. sakei 2–3 on growth, hematological parameters, serum immunological
parameters, serum biochemistry, histopathology, histomorphology, expression
of immune and antioxidant enzyme genes, and disease resistance against L. garvieae in
rainbow trout. The fish were fed four different feeds (control, L. sakei 2–3, C. zeylanoides
Y12-3, and L. sakei 2–3 + C. zeylanoides Y12-3) for 60 days. At the end of the experiment,
growth parameters, serum glucose levels, serum lysozyme activity, and expression of
immune and antioxidant enzyme genes were significantly increased in the probiotic groups.
Additionally, triglyceride levels decreased in the probiotic groups compared to the control
group, whereas serum ALT levels did not change. The villus width and the number
of goblet cells increased in the proximal intestines of the fish in C. zeylanoides and L.
sakei + C. zeylanoides groups. L. sakei 2–3 showed higher superoxide anion production,
expression of immune genes (IgM, IL-B1, lysozyme, TNF-α, HSP70) in the kidney, antioxidant
enzyme genes (GPX, GST, SOD) in the liver compared to C. zeylanoides. TNF-α,
HSP70), and antioxidant enzyme genes (GPX, GST, SOD) compared to C. zeylanoides. L.
sakei and the combination of L. sakei + C. zeylanoides provided resistance to L. garvieae
compared to the control group. However, C. zeylanoides was similar to the other two probiotic
groups regarding disease resistance against L. garvieae. However, histopathological
examinations revealed reversible changes in the proximal intestine, anterior kidney, and
liver of fish in the C. zeylanoides and L. sakei + C. zeylanoides groups. Hence, future studies
are still required to explore the effects of shorter-term use of the C. zeylanoides strain in
rainbow trout to prevent undesirable effects on tissues. In brief, the findings, as mentioned
above, showed that L. sakei 2–3 and C. zeylanoides Y12-3 could be potential probiotic candidates
for use in rainbow trout farming. Moreover, the probiotic effects of both strains on
different fish species should also be studied.