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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Oxford, UK : Blackwell Publishing Ltd
    Journal of fish biology 50 (1997), S. 0 
    ISSN: 1095-8649
    Source: Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
    Topics: Biology
    Notes: The distributions of the diameters of skeletal muscle fibres and adipocytes were studied in rainbow trout. The cellularity of perivisceral adipose tissues and subcutaneous ventral and dorsal adipose tissues were characterized more specifically. In these tissues, a population of small adipocytes was distinguishable from larger adipocytes. The same was observed in white muscle. The effects of extrinsic factors (dietary lipid in two different thermal conditions) and intrinsic factors (strains in two different saline conditions, growth hormone) on the long-term response of the cellularity of both muscle and adipose tissues were studied. The effects of thermal environment were tested on fish fed the same ration and the effects of saline environment on fish fed ad libitum. The mean size of white muscle fibres was relatively unaffected by the different treatments tested: genetic origin and dietary lipid in different environmental conditions. There were significant differences in growth rate due to genetic origin and saline environment. The possible involvement of hyperplasia in response to these different factors is discussed. Growth hormone supplementation enhanced the percentage of small diameter fibres indicating a role of this hormone in the control of muscle hyperplastic growth. The mean size of adipose cells was affected only slightly by the different treatments tested. An increase in adipose cell size with aging and lipid content was observed. The percentage of small adipocytes also increased with aging. Thus, it is proposed that the development of adipose tissues, and thus fat retention, both result from the recruitment of new adipocytes and from the increase in size of existing adipocytes. The hyperplastic process contributed significantly to the differences in fat retention due to different treatments tested (strains, thermal and saline environments). When partially substituting fish oils for corn oils in the diet, a large increase in the ventral adipose cell size was seen indicating a potential negative effect of n-6 fatty acids on cell proliferation. Growth hormone treatment, on the contrary, induced a decrease in the size of perivisceral adipocytes. Thus, diet and hormonal status affect adipose cells size through two different metabolic pathways: lipogenesis and lipolysis respectively.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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