File(s) not publicly available
Understanding the mechanisms of zinc bacitracin and avilamycin on animal production: Linking gut microbiota and growth performance in chickens
journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-20, 00:00 authored by E Crisol-Martínez, Dragana StanleyDragana Stanley, MS Geier, RJ Hughes, RJ Moore© 2017, Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg. Unravelling the mechanisms of how antibiotics influence growth performance through changes in gut microbiota can lead to the identification of highly productive microbiota in animal production. Here we investigated the effect of zinc bacitracin and avilamycin on growth performance and caecal microbiota in chickens and analysed associations between individual bacteria and growth performance. Two trials were undertaken; each used 96 individually caged 15-day-old Cobb broilers. Trial 1 had a control group (n = 48) and a zinc bacitracin (50 ppm) treatment group (n = 48). Trial 2 had a control group (n = 48) and an avilamycin (15 ppm) treatment group (n = 48). Chicken growth performance was evaluated over a 10-day period, and caecal microbiota was characterised by sequencing of bacterial 16S rRNA gene amplicons. Avilamycin produced no effect on growth performance and exhibited little significant disturbance of the microbiota structure. However, zinc bacitracin reduced the feed conversion ratio (FCR) in treated birds, changed the composition and increased the diversity of their caecal microbiota by reducing dominant species. Avilamycin only produced minor reductions in the abundance of two microbial taxa, whereas zinc bacitracin produced relatively large shifts in a number of taxa, primarily Lactobacillus species. Also, a number of phylotypes closely related to lactobacilli species were positively or negatively correlated with FCR values, suggesting contrasting effects of Lactobacillus spp. on chicken growth performance. By harnessing such bacteria, it may be possible to develop high-productivity strategies in poultry that rely on the use of probiotics and less on in-feed antibiotics.
Funding
Category 4 - CRC Research Income
History
Volume
101Issue
11Start Page
4547End Page
4559Number of Pages
14eISSN
1432-0614ISSN
0175-7598Publisher
Springer VerlagPublisher DOI
Peer Reviewed
- Yes
Open Access
- No
External Author Affiliations
University of New England; The University of South Australia; South Australian Research and Development Institute; The University of Adelaide; RMIT University; Monash UniversityEra Eligible
- Yes
Journal
Applied Microbiology and BiotechnologyUsage metrics
Categories
Licence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC