Egg Production in Poultry Farming Is Improved by Probiotic Bacteria
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Peralta-Sánchez, Juan Manuel; Martín Platero, Antonio Manuel; Ariza Romero, Juan José; Rabelo Ruiz, Miguel; Zurita González, María Jesús; Baños, Alberto; Rodríguez Ruano, Sonia; Maqueda Abreu, Mercedes; Valdivia Martínez, Dolores Eva; Martínez Bueno, ManuelEditorial
Frontiers in Media
Materia
Bacterial community Egg production Enterococcus faecalis UGRA10 High-throughput sequencing Laying hens
Date
2019-05-24Referencia bibliográfica
Peralta-Sánchez JM, Martín-Platero AM, Ariza-Romero JJ, Rabelo-Ruiz M, Zurita-González MJ, Baños A, Rodríguez-Ruano SM, Maqueda M, Valdivia E and Martínez-Bueno M (2019) Egg Production in Poultry Farming Is Improved by Probiotic Bacteria. Front. Microbiol. 10:1042.
Sponsorship
This research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Consejería de Economía, Innovación, Ciencia y Empleo (Junta de Andalucía), the University of Granada- CEI BioTic (Project No. P-BS-37), and the INTERCONECTA program (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness). JP-S was funded by Junta de Andalucia (Proyectos de Excelencia 2011- RNM-8147).Abstract
Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is one of the most serious threats for human health in
the near future. Livestock has played an important role in the appearance of antibioticresistant
bacteria, intestinal dysbiosis in farming animals, or the spread of AMR among
pathogenic bacteria of human concern. The development of alternatives like probiotics is
focused on maintaining or improving production levels while diminishing these negative
effects of antibiotics. To this end, we supplied the potential probiotic Enterococcus
faecalis UGRA10 in the diet of laying hens at a final concentration of 108 Colony Forming
Units per gram (CFU/g) of fodder. Its effects have been analyzed by: (i) investigating the
response of the ileum and caecum microbiome; and (ii) analyzing the outcome on eggs
production. During the second half of the experimental period (40 to 76 days), hens
fed E. faecalis UGRA10 maintained egg production, while control animals dropped egg
production. Supplementation diet with E. faecalis UGRA10 significantly increased ileum
and caecum bacterial diversity (higher bacterial operational taxonomic unit richness and
Faith’s diversity index) of laying hens, with animals fed the same diet showing a higher
similarity in microbial composition. These results point out to the beneficial effects of
E. faecalis UGRA10 in egg production. Future experiments are necessary to unveil the
underlying mechanisms that mediate the positive response of animals to this treatment.