Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition | 2019

Performance and intestinal microbiota of chickens receiving probiotic in the feed and submitted to antibiotic therapy

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The purpose of this study was to verify the ability of a probiotic in the feed to maintain the stability of the gut microbiota in chickens after antibiotic therapy and its association with growth performance. One thousand six hundred twenty 1-day-old Cobb male were housed in floor pens (36 pens, 45 birds/pen) and were fed corn-/soya bean meal-based diets supplemented with or without probiotic (Bacillus subtilis) during the entire rearing phase. From 21 to 24\xa0days of age (three consecutive days), the chickens were submitted to antibiotic therapy via drinking water (bacitracin and neomycin) in order to mimic a field treatment and induce dysbiosis. Growth performance was monitored until 42\xa0days of age. At 2, 4 and 6\xa0days after antibiotic therapy, three chickens from each pen were euthanized and the contents of the small intestine and caeca were collected and pooled. The trial was conducted with four treatments and nine replicates in a 2\xa0×\xa02 factorial arrangement for performance characteristics (with and without probiotic\xa0×\xa0with and without antibiotic therapy); for the intestinal microbiota, it was in a 2\xa0×\xa02\xa0×\xa03 factorial arrangement (with and without probiotic\xa0×\xa0with and without antibiotic therapy\xa0×\xa02, 4 and 6\xa0days after the antibiotic therapy) with three replicates per treatment. Terminal restriction length polymorphism (T-RFLP) analysis showed that the structure of gut bacterial community was shaped by the intestinal segment and by the time after the antibiotic therapy. The number of 16S rDNAs copies in caecum contents decreased with time after the therapeutic treatment. The antibiotic therapy and dietary probiotic supplementation decreased richness and diversity indexes in the caecal contents. The improved performance observed in birds supplemented with probiotic may be related to changes promoted by the feed additive in the structure of the intestinal bacterial communities and phylogenetic groups. Antibiotic therapy modified the bacterial structure, but did not cause loss of broiler performance.

Volume 103
Pages 72–86
DOI 10.1111/jpn.13004
Language English
Journal Journal of Animal Physiology and Animal Nutrition

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