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Influence of sanguinarine-based phytobiotic supplementation on post necrotic enteritis challenge recovery

journal contribution
posted on 2021-05-31, 04:20 authored by Mashael R Aljumaah, Manal M Alkhulaifi, Riyadh S Aljumaah, Alaeldein M Abudabos, Aabdulaziz A Abdullatif, Gamaleldin M Suliman, Mu'ath Q Al-Ghadi, Dragana StanleyDragana Stanley
In the animal production industry, plant-derived antimicrobial phytobiotics are used as an alternative to antibiotics. Here we investigated the role sanguinarine-based phytobiotic in broiler recovery from Necrotic Enteritis (NE) infection. A total of 100 one-day-old broiler chicks (Ross 308) were randomly allocated to four treatments: negative control CTR (no challenge, no phytobiotic supplementation); positive control NE (NE challenged); phytobiotic SG (sanguinarine phytobiotic, 0.12 g/kg); and SG + NE, (sanguinarine phytobiotic, 0.12 g/kg and NE challenge). Sanguinarine-based phytobiotic supplementation caused significant changes between the groups in performance, livability and histological measurements, however, these changes were not significantly different between SG + NE and NE groups. Significant improvement was detected in NE lesion score of the duodenum and ileum of SG + NE birds compared to NE challenged birds at the end of the production cycle at 40 days old, indicating improved post-NE recovery with the addition of phytobiotic. Sanguinarine-based phytobiotic supplementation in NE challenged birds significantly compensated for a NE associated reduction of Firmicutes and an increase in Bacteroidetes. Functional profile of sanguinarine-based phytobiotic supplemented birds microbiota was distinct from CTR functional profile. NE challenge was associated with a significant increase in cecal propionic acid, while sanguinarine-based phytobiotic supplementation resulted in an increase in cecal acetic acid.

History

Volume

6

Issue

11

Start Page

1

End Page

10

Number of Pages

10

eISSN

2405-8440

ISSN

2405-8440

Location

England

Publisher

Elsevier

Publisher License

CC BY-NC-ND

Additional Rights

CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

Language

eng

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • Yes

Acceptance Date

2020-10-23

External Author Affiliations

King Saud University, Saudi Arabia;

Author Research Institute

  • Institute for Future Farming Systems

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Medium

Electronic-eCollection

Journal

Heliyon

Article Number

e05361

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