4.6 Article

Impact of Putative Probiotics on Growth, Behavior, and the Gut Microbiome of Farmed Arctic Char (Salvelinus alpinus)

Journal

FRONTIERS IN MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2022.912473

Keywords

probiotics; aquaculture; gut microbiome; salmonid; Mycoplasma; growth; behavior

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Funding

  1. EU [818368]
  2. Icelandic AVS fund [R 17 018-17]

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Beneficial bacteria have potential to improve the health and productivity of farmed fish, but their effects on Arctic char have not been well studied. This research examined the impact of 10 probiotic strains on the growth, behavior, and gut microbiome of Arctic char. The strains showed tolerance to gastric juice and fish bile acid, as well as high auto-aggregation activity. However, they did not significantly alter the core gut microbiome or colonize the gut after a 4-week treatment. Despite the lack of long-term colonization, the presence of these bacterial strains had either beneficial or detrimental effects on host growth and motility.
Beneficial bacteria promise to promote the health and productivity of farmed fish species. However, the impact on host physiology is largely strain-dependent, and studies on Arctic char (Salvelinus alpinus), a commercially farmed salmonid species, are lacking. In this study, 10 candidate probiotic strains were subjected to in vitro assays, small-scale growth trials, and behavioral analysis with juvenile Arctic char to examine the impact of probiotic supplementation on fish growth, behavior and the gut microbiome. Most strains showed high tolerance to gastric juice and fish bile acid, as well as high auto-aggregation activity, which are important probiotic characteristics. However, they neither markedly altered the core gut microbiome, which was dominated by three bacterial species, nor detectably colonized the gut environment after the 4-week probiotic treatment. Despite a lack of long-term colonization, the presence of the bacterial strains showed either beneficial or detrimental effects on the host through growth rate enhancement or reduction, as well as changes in fish motility under confinement. This study offers insights into the effect of bacterial strains on a salmonid host and highlights three strains, Carnobacterium divergens V41, Pediococcus acidilactici ASG16, and Lactiplantibacillus plantarum ISCAR-07436, for future research into growth promotion of salmonid fish through probiotic supplementation.

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