Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens

Using a nutrigenomics approach we studied the response of second-generation chickens at a transcriptional level to organically grown feed ingredients compared with conventionally grown feed ingredients. Both diets consisted of the same amounts of ingredients, the only difference was the production method. Gene expression was analysed in jejuni using whole genome chicken cDNA arrays. After analysis, forty-nine genes were found to be differentially regulated between chickens fed on the different diets, independent of their genetic background. Of these forty-nine genes, seven genes were involved in cholesterol biosynthesis. Genes involved in cholesterol biosynthesis were higher expressed in jejuni from organically fed birds. Other genes found to be regulated were involved in immunological processes, such as B-G protein (part of chicken major histocompatibility complex), chemokine ah221, and the immunoglobulin heavy chain. Using quantitative PCR the effect of genetic background on the differential expression of genes was studied. Differences in gene expression existed between animals fed different diets as well as between different chicken lines. This indicated that diet and genetic background influence the transcriptional response of the jejunum. This is the first time that significant differences in gene expression were shown between animals on diets with organically or conventionally produced ingredients

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: de Greeff, A., Huber, M., van de Vijver, L.P.L., Swinkels, W.J.C., Parmentier, H.K., Rebel, J.M.J.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:antibody-responses, disease, food safety, red-blood-cells, systems,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effect-of-organically-and-conventionally-produced-diets-on-jejuna
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3856172024-09-30 de Greeff, A. Huber, M. van de Vijver, L.P.L. Swinkels, W.J.C. Parmentier, H.K. Rebel, J.M.J. Article/Letter to editor British Journal of Nutrition 103 (2010) 5 ISSN: 0007-1145 Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens 2010 Using a nutrigenomics approach we studied the response of second-generation chickens at a transcriptional level to organically grown feed ingredients compared with conventionally grown feed ingredients. Both diets consisted of the same amounts of ingredients, the only difference was the production method. Gene expression was analysed in jejuni using whole genome chicken cDNA arrays. After analysis, forty-nine genes were found to be differentially regulated between chickens fed on the different diets, independent of their genetic background. Of these forty-nine genes, seven genes were involved in cholesterol biosynthesis. Genes involved in cholesterol biosynthesis were higher expressed in jejuni from organically fed birds. Other genes found to be regulated were involved in immunological processes, such as B-G protein (part of chicken major histocompatibility complex), chemokine ah221, and the immunoglobulin heavy chain. Using quantitative PCR the effect of genetic background on the differential expression of genes was studied. Differences in gene expression existed between animals fed different diets as well as between different chicken lines. This indicated that diet and genetic background influence the transcriptional response of the jejunum. This is the first time that significant differences in gene expression were shown between animals on diets with organically or conventionally produced ingredients en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effect-of-organically-and-conventionally-produced-diets-on-jejuna 10.1017/S0007114509992273 https://edepot.wur.nl/53528 antibody-responses disease food safety red-blood-cells systems Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic antibody-responses
disease
food safety
red-blood-cells
systems
antibody-responses
disease
food safety
red-blood-cells
systems
spellingShingle antibody-responses
disease
food safety
red-blood-cells
systems
antibody-responses
disease
food safety
red-blood-cells
systems
de Greeff, A.
Huber, M.
van de Vijver, L.P.L.
Swinkels, W.J.C.
Parmentier, H.K.
Rebel, J.M.J.
Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
description Using a nutrigenomics approach we studied the response of second-generation chickens at a transcriptional level to organically grown feed ingredients compared with conventionally grown feed ingredients. Both diets consisted of the same amounts of ingredients, the only difference was the production method. Gene expression was analysed in jejuni using whole genome chicken cDNA arrays. After analysis, forty-nine genes were found to be differentially regulated between chickens fed on the different diets, independent of their genetic background. Of these forty-nine genes, seven genes were involved in cholesterol biosynthesis. Genes involved in cholesterol biosynthesis were higher expressed in jejuni from organically fed birds. Other genes found to be regulated were involved in immunological processes, such as B-G protein (part of chicken major histocompatibility complex), chemokine ah221, and the immunoglobulin heavy chain. Using quantitative PCR the effect of genetic background on the differential expression of genes was studied. Differences in gene expression existed between animals fed different diets as well as between different chicken lines. This indicated that diet and genetic background influence the transcriptional response of the jejunum. This is the first time that significant differences in gene expression were shown between animals on diets with organically or conventionally produced ingredients
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet antibody-responses
disease
food safety
red-blood-cells
systems
author de Greeff, A.
Huber, M.
van de Vijver, L.P.L.
Swinkels, W.J.C.
Parmentier, H.K.
Rebel, J.M.J.
author_facet de Greeff, A.
Huber, M.
van de Vijver, L.P.L.
Swinkels, W.J.C.
Parmentier, H.K.
Rebel, J.M.J.
author_sort de Greeff, A.
title Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
title_short Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
title_full Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
title_fullStr Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
title_sort effect of organically and conventionally produced diets on jejunal gene expression in chickens
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/effect-of-organically-and-conventionally-produced-diets-on-jejuna
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