Abstract:To investigate the effects of starvation and re-feeding on hepatic fatty acid composition and lipid metabolism in mandarin fish (Siniperca chuatsi), fish with an average body weight of (5.57±0.57) g were divided into three groups with three replicates in each group. The control group was fed live bait normally for 0 days (C0), three days (C3), six days (C6), nine days (C9), and 18 days (C18). The starvation groups were deprived of food for three days (S3), six days (S6), or nine days (S9), whereas the re-feeding groups were deprived of food for three days followed by normal feeding for 15 days (S3R15), six days followed by normal feeding for 12 days (S6R12), or nine days followed by normal feeding for nine days (S9R9). The experiment lasted for 18 days, during which changes in growth indices, hepatic fatty acid composition, and lipid metabolism gene expression were examined. The results showed that: (1) With prolonged starvation, body weight, liver weight, hepatosomatic index, and liver crude fat content in the starvation groups gradually decreased, significantly lower than those in the corresponding control group (P<0.05). In the S9 group, hepatocytes showed vacuolation, and cell boundaries became unclear. After re-feeding, there were no significant differences in body weight, liver weight, and hepatosomatic index (HIS) between the S3R15, S6R12, and C18 groups (P>0.05), whereas body weight and liver weight in the S9R9 group were significantly lower than those in the C18 group (P<0.05). Crude fat content in the S3R15 group recovered (P<0.05), whereas hepatocytes morphology in the S9R9 group was not fully recovered. (2) As starvation progressed, the relative contents of saturated fatty acid (SFA) (C16: 0, C 18: 0), monounsaturated fatty acids (MUFA) (C16: 1n-7, C18: 1n-9), and 20: 4n-6 in the liver of the starvation group gradually decreased, while the relative contents of polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) (C18: 2n-6, C20: 5n-3, C22: 6n-3) gradually increased. In the re-feeding group, the relative contents of all fatty acids were recovered to the levels of the C18 group, except for C20: 5n-3 and C 22: 6n-3, which were significantly higher than those in the C18 group (P<0.05). (3) As the duration of starvation increased, the relative expression levels of fatty acid synthase (fasn), acetyl-CoA carboxylase (acaca), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (ppar-γ), and elongation of very long-chain fatty acids protein 6 (elovl6) significantly decreased, whereas the relative expression levels of carnitine palmitoyltransferase 1Ab (cpt1ab) and acyl-CoA oxidase 1 (acox1) significantly increased (P<0.05). After re-feeding, the relative expression levels of fasn and ppar-γ in all re-feeding groups, acox1, cpt1ab, and elovl6 in the S3R15 group, and acox1 in the S6R12 group were recovered (P<0.05). These results indicate that MUFA and SFA are primarily utilized in the liver of mandarin fish under starvation conditions, whereas SFA, MUFA, and PUFA contents could be recovered after re-feeding. Starvation promotes lipolysis and inhibits lipogenesis, whereas re-feeding can recover normal lipid metabolism. This research provides fundamental data on the physiological mechanisms of nutritional regulation during starvation in mandarin fish.