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Poult Sci 2006. 85:2149-2155
© 2006 Poultry Science Association
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IMMUNOLOGY, HEALTH, AND DISEASE

Effects of Particle Size and Physical Form of Diets on Mast Cell Numbers, Histamine, and Stem Cell Factor Concentration in the Small Intestine of Broiler Chickens

Y. H. Liu, X. S. Piao1, D. Y. Ou, Y. H. Cao, D. S. Huang and D. F. Li

National Key Lab of Animal Nutrition, China Agricultural University, Beijing, China, 100094

1 Corresponding author: piaoxsh{at}eyou.com

The aim of this study was to investigate the hypothesis that particle size and diet form may affect the growth of mast cells and histamine release from the small intestine of broiler chickens. A total of 288, day-old male broiler chicks were randomly allocated to 1 of 4 corn-soy diets in a 2 x 2 factorial design. The factors included particle size (coarse vs. fine) and physical form (mash vs. pellet). The birds were housed in 90 x 60 cm pens containing 12 birds, and each treatment contained 6 replicate pens of birds from d 1 to 22. On d 22, 6 broilers from each treatment were slaughtered. Tissues from the small intestine (duodenum, jejunum, and ileum) were obtained to quantify mast cells using the toluidine blue staining technique. The results showed that mast cells in the jejunum were concentrated in the upper part of the villus in birds fed the coarsely ground mash diet, whereas mast cells were evenly distributed throughout the intestine in birds fed the other 3 diets. The number of mast cells was significantly lower in the duodenum (P = 0.04), jejunum (P < 0.01), and ileum (P = 0.01) of birds fed coarsely ground diets compared with finely ground diets, and there was no difference in mast cell numbers between birds fed mashed or pelleted diets at any site in the intestine. The histamine content (P = 0.02) and stem cell factor concentration (P = 0.03) were markedly lower in the jejunum of birds that were fed coarsely ground diets compared with finely ground diets. The stem cell factor concentration in the duodenum (P < 0.01) and jejunum (P = 0.05) was higher in birds fed pelleted compared with mash diets. The overall results of this experiment suggest that particle size and diet form affect mast cell number and histamine content in the small intestine by regulation of stem cell factor concentration.

Key Words: particle size • diet form • mast cell • histamine • broiler







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