Abstract:
Stocking space significantly influences the welfare of cultured animals and modulates their physiological homeostasis. This study investigated the effects of stocking space on stress response and growth of grass carp (
Ctenopharyngodon idella) cultured in a recirculating aquaculture system. Grass carp were cultured at a density of 20 kg/m
3 in two different stocking spaces: 0.47 m
3 (small stocking space, SSS) and 2.98 m
3 (large stocking space, LSS) for 10 weeks. LSS group exhibited significant enhancements in body weight, weight gain rate, and specific growth rate. Conversely, fish in the SSS group showed a reduced feed conversion ratio, indicating compromised growth performance. Histological analysis demonstrated that the LSS group had significantly enlarged muscular fiber diameter, accompanied by a decrease in muscular fiber density. Molecular analyses revealed that a larger stocking space significantly upregulated the relative expression of
ghrh,
gh,
igf-1,
igf-2, and
igf-1r, and meanwhile elevated transcriptional levels of
pi3k,
akt1,
tor, and
s6k1 in muscle. The protein levels of p-AKT1
Ser473, p-TOR
Ser2448 as well as the ratios of p-AKT1
Ser473/AKT1 and p-TOR
Ser2448/TOR were clearly higher in LSS group. In comparison, hypothalamus-pituitary-interrenal (HPI) axis was more potently activated in the SSS group, as evidenced by the elevated levels of both brain corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) content and serum adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) and cortisol concentrations. HPI axis-related genes were significantly upregulated in SSS group. These findings suggest that expanding stocking space mitigates the HPI axis activity and promotes fish growth via activation of the GH/IGFs axis and PI3K/AKT/TOR pathway.