Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.

Rearing dual-purpose chickens is a practicable approach to avoid culling one-day-old male layer chicks. The present study examined the impact of a conventional fattening diet on the liver of a novel dual-purpose chicken line (Lohmann Dual, LD) in comparison to a broiler (Ross 308) chicken line. Age-...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zaher Alshamy, Kenneth C Richardson, George Harash, Hana Hünigen, Ilen Röhe, Hafez Mohamed Hafez, Johanna Plendl, Salah Al Masri
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226903
id doaj-240c3593ccfc40f3a0b492909c0c97b3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-240c3593ccfc40f3a0b492909c0c97b32021-03-03T21:20:12ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-011412e022690310.1371/journal.pone.0226903Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.Zaher AlshamyKenneth C RichardsonGeorge HarashHana HünigenIlen RöheHafez Mohamed HafezJohanna PlendlSalah Al MasriRearing dual-purpose chickens is a practicable approach to avoid culling one-day-old male layer chicks. The present study examined the impact of a conventional fattening diet on the liver of a novel dual-purpose chicken line (Lohmann Dual, LD) in comparison to a broiler (Ross 308) chicken line. Age-related changes of structure and lipid content of the liver were assessed. One hundred twenty and newly hatched chicks (LD = 66, Ross = 54) were kept under the same husbandry conditions and fed a commercial diet for 5 weeks for Ross and 9 weeks for LD. Six birds of each line were examined weekly. Their body weight (BW) and liver mass were recorded. Microscopic structure and ultrastructure of the liver were investigated and the liver lipid content was measured using a pre-validated method. During the study period, liver mass increased with age, while normalized liver mass decreased. Furthermore, liver mass of Ross birds was greater than that of LD birds of the same BW. Overall, no significant differences were observed in the hepatic structure or ultrastructure between the two chicken lines. The hepatic lymphatic aggregations were without fibrous capsules and their number and area increased throughout the first week, then the values began to fluctuate with age in both chicken lines. The changes in the liver lipid content of the two chicken lines were within the normal physiological range over the term of the study. The liver lipid content correlated negatively with age and body weight in both lines. It was the highest on the first day then decreased until day 7 and thereafter did not change in both chicken lines. However, given the same body weight, the Ross chickens had a 9% greater liver lipid content than LD chickens. It is concluded that there is no apparent adverse effect of a high-energy diet on the liver of LD chickens.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226903
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zaher Alshamy
Kenneth C Richardson
George Harash
Hana Hünigen
Ilen Röhe
Hafez Mohamed Hafez
Johanna Plendl
Salah Al Masri
spellingShingle Zaher Alshamy
Kenneth C Richardson
George Harash
Hana Hünigen
Ilen Röhe
Hafez Mohamed Hafez
Johanna Plendl
Salah Al Masri
Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Zaher Alshamy
Kenneth C Richardson
George Harash
Hana Hünigen
Ilen Röhe
Hafez Mohamed Hafez
Johanna Plendl
Salah Al Masri
author_sort Zaher Alshamy
title Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
title_short Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
title_full Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
title_fullStr Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
title_full_unstemmed Structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: A comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
title_sort structure and age-dependent growth of the chicken liver together with liver fat quantification: a comparison between a dual-purpose and a broiler chicken line.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Rearing dual-purpose chickens is a practicable approach to avoid culling one-day-old male layer chicks. The present study examined the impact of a conventional fattening diet on the liver of a novel dual-purpose chicken line (Lohmann Dual, LD) in comparison to a broiler (Ross 308) chicken line. Age-related changes of structure and lipid content of the liver were assessed. One hundred twenty and newly hatched chicks (LD = 66, Ross = 54) were kept under the same husbandry conditions and fed a commercial diet for 5 weeks for Ross and 9 weeks for LD. Six birds of each line were examined weekly. Their body weight (BW) and liver mass were recorded. Microscopic structure and ultrastructure of the liver were investigated and the liver lipid content was measured using a pre-validated method. During the study period, liver mass increased with age, while normalized liver mass decreased. Furthermore, liver mass of Ross birds was greater than that of LD birds of the same BW. Overall, no significant differences were observed in the hepatic structure or ultrastructure between the two chicken lines. The hepatic lymphatic aggregations were without fibrous capsules and their number and area increased throughout the first week, then the values began to fluctuate with age in both chicken lines. The changes in the liver lipid content of the two chicken lines were within the normal physiological range over the term of the study. The liver lipid content correlated negatively with age and body weight in both lines. It was the highest on the first day then decreased until day 7 and thereafter did not change in both chicken lines. However, given the same body weight, the Ross chickens had a 9% greater liver lipid content than LD chickens. It is concluded that there is no apparent adverse effect of a high-energy diet on the liver of LD chickens.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0226903
work_keys_str_mv AT zaheralshamy structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT kennethcrichardson structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT georgeharash structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT hanahunigen structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT ilenrohe structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT hafezmohamedhafez structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT johannaplendl structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
AT salahalmasri structureandagedependentgrowthofthechickenlivertogetherwithliverfatquantificationacomparisonbetweenadualpurposeandabroilerchickenline
_version_ 1714817431988338688