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Impact of commercial gut health interventions on caecal metagenome and broiler performance

Pangga, GM; Star-Shirko, B; Psifidi, A; Xia, D; Corcionivoschi, N; Kelly, C; Hughes, C; Lavery, U; Richmond, A; Ijaz, UZ; Gundogdu, O

Authors

GM Pangga

B Star-Shirko

A Psifidi

D Xia

N Corcionivoschi

C Kelly

C Hughes

U Lavery

A Richmond

UZ Ijaz

O Gundogdu



Abstract

BackgroundMaintaining gut health is a persistent and unresolved challenge in the poultry industry. Given the critical role of gut health in chicken performance and welfare, there is a pressing need to identify effective gut health intervention (GHI) strategies to ensure optimal outcomes in poultry farming. In this study, across three broiler production cycles, we compared the metagenomes and performance of broilers provided with ionophores (as the control group) against birds subjected to five different GHI combinations involving vaccination, probiotics, prebiotics, essential oils, and reduction of ionophore use.ResultsUsing a binning strategy, 84 (>= 75% completeness, <= 5% contamination) metagenome-assembled genomes (MAGs) from 118 caecal samples were recovered and annotated for their metabolic potential. The majority of these (n = 52, 61%) had a differential response across all cohorts and are associated with the performance parameter - European poultry efficiency factor (EPEF). The control group exhibited the highest EPEF, followed closely by the cohort where probiotics are used in conjunction with vaccination. The use of probiotics B, a commercial Bacillus strain-based formulation, was determined to contribute to the superior performance of birds. GHI supplementation generally affected the abundance of microbial enzymes relating to carbohydrate and protein digestion and metabolic pathways relating to energy, nucleotide synthesis, short-chain fatty acid synthesis, and drug-transport systems. These shifts are hypothesised to differentiate performance among groups and cycles, highlighting the beneficial role of several bacteria, including Rikenella microfusus and UBA7160 species.ConclusionsAll GHIs are shown to be effective methods for gut microbial modulation, with varying influences on MAG diversity, composition, and microbial functions. These metagenomic insights greatly enhance our understanding of microbiota-related metabolic pathways, enabling us to devise strategies against enteric pathogens related to poultry products and presenting new opportunities to improve overall poultry performance and health.7L1xU6sKvy1sLntC7jPKebVideo AbstractConclusionsAll GHIs are shown to be effective methods for gut microbial modulation, with varying influences on MAG diversity, composition, and microbial functions. These metagenomic insights greatly enhance our understanding of microbiota-related metabolic pathways, enabling us to devise strategies against enteric pathogens related to poultry products and presenting new opportunities to improve overall poultry performance and health.7L1xU6sKvy1sLntC7jPKebVideo Abstract

Citation

Pangga, G., Star-Shirko, B., Psifidi, A., Xia, D., Corcionivoschi, N., Kelly, C., Hughes, C., Lavery, U., Richmond, A., Ijaz, U., & Gundogdu, O. (2025). Impact of commercial gut health interventions on caecal metagenome and broiler performance. Microbiome, 13(1), https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-024-02012-7

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Dec 17, 2024
Online Publication Date Jan 29, 2025
Publication Date 2025
Deposit Date Feb 26, 2025
Publicly Available Date Feb 26, 2025
Journal Microbiome
Print ISSN 2049-2618
Electronic ISSN 2049-2618
Publisher BioMed Central
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 13
Issue 1
DOI https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-024-02012-7
Keywords Chicken gut microbiome; Metagenomics; Gut health; Broiler performance; Shotgun sequencing; Probiotics; INTESTINAL MICROBIOTA; ANTIBIOTICS; ENCYCLOPEDIA; METABOLISM; QUALITY; DIETS; MODE

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