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Dive into the research topics where Ramez Alhazzaa is active.

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Featured researches published by Ramez Alhazzaa.


Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry | 2011

Up-regulated Desaturase and Elongase Gene Expression Promoted Accumulation of Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid (PUFA) but Not Long-Chain PUFA in Lates calcarifer, a Tropical Euryhaline Fish, Fed a Stearidonic Acid- and γ-Linoleic Acid-Enriched Diet

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter

The limited activity of Δ6 fatty acid desaturase (FAD6) on α-linolenic (ALA, 18:3n-3) and linoleic (LA, 18:2n-6) acids in marine fish alters the long-chain (≥C(20)) polyunsaturated fatty acid (LC-PUFA) concentration in fish muscle and liver when vegetable oils replace fish oil (FO) in aquafeeds. Echium oil (EO), rich in stearidonic acid (SDA, 18:4n-3) and γ-linoleic acid (GLA, 18:3n-6), may enhance the biosynthesis of n-3 and n-6 LC-PUFA by bypassing the rate-limiting FAD6 step. Nutritional and environmental modulation of the mechanisms in LC-PUFA biosynthesis was examined in barramundi, Lates calcarifer , a tropical euryhaline fish. Juveniles were maintained in either freshwater or seawater and fed different dietary LC-PUFA precursors present in EO or rapeseed oil (RO) and compared with FO. After 8 weeks, growth of fish fed EO was slower compared to the FO and RO treatments. Irrespective of salinity, expression of the FAD6 and elongase was up-regulated in fish fed EO and RO diets, but did not lead to significant accumulation of LC-PUFA in the neutral lipid of fish tissues as occurred in the FO treatment. However, significant concentrations of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5n-3) and arachidonic acid (ARA, 20:4n-6), but not docosahexaenoic acid (DHA, 22:6n-3), appeared in liver and, to a lesser extent, in muscle of fish fed EO with marked increases in the phospholipid fraction. Fish in the EO treatment had higher EPA and ARA in their liver phospholipids than fish fed FO. Endogenous conversion of dietary precursors into neutral lipid LC-PUFA appears to be limited by factors other than the initial rate-limiting step. In contrast, phospholipid LC-PUFA had higher biosynthesis, or selective retention, in barramundi fed EO rather than RO.


Food Chemistry | 2012

Sesamin modulation of lipid class and fatty acid profile in early juvenile teleost, Lates calcarifer, fed different dietary oils

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Cg Carter; Peter D. Nichols

Sesamin, a major sesame seed lignan, has diverse biological functions including the modulation of molecular actions in lipid metabolic pathways and reducing cholesterol levels. Vertebrates have different capacities to biosynthesize long-chain PUFA from dietary precursors and sesamin can enhance the biosynthesis of ALA to EPA and DHA in marine teleost. Early juvenile barramundi, Lates calcarifer, were fed for two weeks on diets rich in ALA or SDA derived from linseed or Echium plantagineum, respectively. Both diets contained phytosterols and less cholesterol compared with a standard fish oil-based diet. The growth rates were reduced in the animals receiving sesamin regardless of the dietary oil. However, the relative levels of n-3 LC-PUFA in total lipid, but not the phospholipid, increased in the whole body by up to 25% in animals fed on sesamin with ALA or SDA. Sesamin reduced the relative levels of triacylglycerols and increased polar lipid, and did not affect the relative composition of phospholipid subclasses or sterols. Sesamin is a potent modulator for LC-PUFA biosynthesis in animals, but probably will have more effective impact at advanced ages. By modulating certain lipid metabolic pathways, sesamin has probably disrupted the body growth and development of organs and tissues in early juvenile barramundi.


Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology A-molecular & Integrative Physiology | 2013

Coping with sub-optimal water temperature: Modifications in fatty acid profile of barramundi as influenced by dietary lipid

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter

Metabolic responses to sub-optimal temperature deplete lipid depots, remodel membrane lipid and alter the fatty acid profile in the whole body and tissues of ectothermic vertebrates including fish. The magnitude of these changes may depend on dietary history including oil sources with different fatty acid compositions. Barramundi, Lates calcarifer (Perciformes, Latidae), a tropical ectothermic fish, was fed on diets either rich in dietary long-chain (≥C(20)) polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFA) from fish oil, rich in stearidonic and γ-linolenic acid (SDA and GLA, respectively) from Echium plantagineum, or rapeseed oil deficient in LC-PUFA. Following 5 weeks at the optimum temperature of 30 °C when growth rates were comparable amongst dietary treatments, water temperature was dropped to 20 °C for 1 week for half of the animals and maintained at 30 °C for the other half. Decreased temperature increased the liver and skeletal muscle content of LC-PUFA in fish fed on echium oil compared with rapeseed oil, while dietary LC-PUFA depots in fish oil fed-fish depleted rapidly in the week of sub-optimal temperature. The lipid unsaturation index of cellular membrane in the liver and muscle increased under low temperature at the same rate regardless of dietary oil. Therefore, rapid exposure of an ectothermic vertebrate to a lower and sub-optimal temperature caused significant modulation in fatty acid composition. We propose that the tolerance of barramundi, a representative of tropical farmed fish, to sub-optimal temperature will be enhanced when fatty acid substrates closer to the LC-PUFA are available in their diet.


Food Chemistry | 2013

Echium oil is better than rapeseed oil in improving the response of barramundi to a disease challenge

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Trevor A. Mori; Anne Barden; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter

Pathogen infection stimulates the fatty acid (FA) metabolism and the production of pro-inflammatory derivatives of FA. Barramundi, Lates calcarifer, was fed on a diet rich in preformed long-chain (⩾C20) polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFA) from fish oil (FO), to compare with diets containing high levels of C18 precursors for LC-PUFA - stearidonic (SDA) and γ-linolenic acid (GLA) - from Echium plantagineum (EO), or rapeseed oil (RO) rich in α-linolenic acid (ALA), but a poor source of LC-PUFA and their precursors. After 6weeks, when growth rates were similar amongst the dietary treatments, a sub-lethal dose of Streptococcus iniae was administered to half of the fish, while the other half were maintained unchallenged and were pair-fed with the infected fish. Under a disease challenge situation, the tissue FA depots depleted at 3days post-infection (DPI) and were then restored to their previous concentrations at 7DPI. During the infection period, EO fish had a higher content of n3 and n6 PUFA in their tissues, higher n3:n6 PUFA ratio and reduced levels of the eicosanoids, TXB2 and 6-keto-PGF1α, in their plasma compared with RO fish. Fish fed on FO and EO had a longer lasting and enduring response in their FA and eicosanoid concentrations, following a week of bacterial infection, compared with those fed on RO. EO, containing SDA and GLA and with a comparatively higher n3:n6 PUFA ratio, proved more effective than RO in compensating for immunity stress.


Aquaculture | 2011

Replacing dietary fish oil with Echium oil enriched barramundi with C18 PUFA rather than long-chain PUFA

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter


Reviews in Aquaculture | 2018

Sustainable alternatives to dietary fish oil in tropical fish aquaculture

Ramez Alhazzaa; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter


Archive | 2011

Dietary oil modulates fatty acid profile in disease challenged barramundi

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter


Biennial AOCS - Australasian Section Conference | 2011

Vegetable oils in tropical aquaculture: towards a sustainable future. Biennial AOCS - Australasian Section Conference. Adelaide, 9-11 November 2011. pp: 29-30

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter


Aquaculture America 2011 | 2011

Dietary oil modulates fatty acid profile in disease challenged barramundi. Aquaculture America, New Orleans,US, pp. 30. (2011). [Conference Extract]

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Peter D. Nichols; Cg Carter


The 14th International Symposuim on Fish Nutrition and Feeding Qingdao, China 2010 | 2010

Thermal regulation of lipid metabolism in barramundi, Lates calcarifer

Ramez Alhazzaa; Ar Bridle; Cg Carter; Peter D. Nichols

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Cg Carter

University of Tasmania

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Ar Bridle

University of Tasmania

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Anne Barden

University of Western Australia

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Trevor A. Mori

University of Western Australia

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