Effect of dietary black soldier fly larvae meal on fatty acid composition of lipids and sn-2 position of triglycerides of marketable size gilthead sea bream fillets

Pulido, Lina; Secci, Giulia; Maricchiolo, Giulia; Gasco, Laura; Gai, Francesco; Serra, Andrea; Conte, Giuseppe; Parisi, Giuliana;

Insects are an alternative protein source recently adopted in aquacultured carnivorous species. However, the replacement of marine ingredients with insect meal might cut down the n3 polyunsaturated fatty acid (PUFA) of fish fillet, a fraction of great interest for human nutrition. Recently, it has been shown that different animal species and the human species better absorb the dietary fatty acids esterified in the sn-2 position of the triglyceride (TG) than those contained in the sn-1 and sn-3 positions. Hence, the present paper aimed to evaluate in which extent replacing fishmeal with insect meal could alter not only the fillet fatty acid (FA) profile, but even the FA distribution inside the TGs. Specifically, three-hundred and sixty gilthead sea bream (Sparus aurata L.) were randomly divided into four groups with three replicates each. The fish were fed for 120 days four isoenergetic, isolipidic and isoproteic diets where fishmeal was substituted by Hermetia illucens (HI) larvae meal. The inclusion levels were 0% (HI0), 9.2% (HI9), 18.4% (HI18) and 27.6% (HI27), corresponding to 0, 25, 50 and 75% of fishmeal substitution, respectively. At the end of the trial, 10 fish per group were analyzed for marketable traits, fillet color values and lipid composition. Dietary intervention did not affect any of the considered marketable traits and the fillet color. Major changes were observed in the FA profile of the fillet lipids. The fillets from fish fed HI18 and HI27 contained the highest amount of saturated fatty acids while their n-3 PUFA were significantly reduced in comparison with HI0 and HI9. Analogous variations were observed in the FA composition of the TG fraction. On the contrary, dietary HI did not reduce the overall n-3 PUFA positioned in the sn-2 of TG, nor eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA) percentage. In conclusion, dietary HI inclusion did not substantially modify the presence of important fatty acids for human nutrition (i.e., EPA and DHA) in the sn-2 position of the fillet triglycerides, increasing the chances to be better assimilated and absorbed by humans.


2022 - Articolo in rivista


Aquaculture (Amst.) 546 (2022). doi:10.1016/j.aquaculture.2021.737351


Keywords: Fatty acids, Insect meal, Nutritional quality, Seafood


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Le attività di ricerca dell’Istituto vengono condotte nell’ambito di progetti di ricerca, sviluppo ed innovazione, sia di carattere nazionale che internazionale, a valere su programmi di finanziamento a regia regionale (POR FEAMPA - Programma Operativo Regionale del Fondo Europeo Affari Marittimi Pesca e Acquacoltura e POR FESR - Programma Operativo Regionale del Fondo Europeo di Sviluppo Regionale) o ministeriale (PRIN – Progetti di rilevante interesse nazionale, PNRA - Programma nazionale di ricerca in Antartide, PO FEAMPA - Programma Operativo Nazionale Fondo Europeo Affari Marittimi Pesca e Acquacoltura), programmi per la Cooperazione Territoriale Europea (Interreg), programmi di finanziamento diretto della Commissione Europea (Horizon2020 ed Horizon Europe, Life, JPI - Joint Programming Initiatives, ERA-NET Cofund) ed iniziative di collaborazione tematica gestite da organizzazioni internazionali quali, ad esempio, la FAO – GFCM (General Fisheries Commission for the Mediterranean). L’Istituto sviluppa anche progetti finanziati nell’ambito di collaborazioni con imprese private nei settori della blue economy nonché del trasferimento tecnologico e dei risultati della ricerca. I progetti di ricerca, prevalentemente di carattere collaborativo, vengono sviluppati attraverso un’ampia rete di partner che includono la maggiori Istituzioni di Ricerca ed Università italiane ed estere.

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