4.6 Article

Indigestible carbohydrates alter the intestinal microbiota but do not influence the performance of broiler chickens

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 106, Issue 5, Pages 1540-1548

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-2672.2008.04116.x

Keywords

antimicrobial; chicken; denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis; gut microbial profiling; prebiotics; terminal-restriction fragment length polymorphism

Funding

  1. Australian Poultry Co-operative Research Centre

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Prebiotics are a potential alternative to in-feed antimicrobials to improve performance of chickens. We investigated the effects of mannanoligosaccharide (MOS) and fructooligosaccharide (FOS) on growth, performance and the intestinal microbiota. Cobb 500 birds were fed either: Control, starter diet without antimicrobials; ZnB, Control + 50 ppm zinc bacitracin; MOS, Control + 5 g kg(-1) MOS; or FOS, Control + 5 g kg(-1) FOS. An energy metabolism study was conducted and intestinal microbial communities assessed by T-RFLP and Lac PCR-DGGE. Diet did not influence performance. Ileal microbial communities were significantly different in ZnB-fed birds compared to all diets, and FOS-fed chickens compared to Control. MOS-fed chickens had a different caecal profile to ZnB and FOS-fed birds. Consensus Lac PCR-DGGE profiles indicated Lactobacillus communities clustered according to diet with Lactobacillus johnsonii characteristic of ZnB diet. Control and MOS-fed chickens displayed significantly different jejunal Lactobacillus profiles to each other whilst ileal profiles were different between MOS and FOS-fed birds. Prebiotics influenced the intestinal microbiota, but did not affect performance. In light of pressure for in-feed antimicrobial withdrawal, the impact of alternative compounds on the intestinal microbiota and bird performance is critical to the poultry industry.

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