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Effects of Dietary Fat Source and Subtherapeutic Levels of Antibiotic on the Bacterial Community in the Ileum of Broiler Chickens at Various Ages

361

Citations

30

References

2002

Year

TLDR

The study examined how soy oil versus a lard‑tallow mix and sub‑therapeutic avilamycin/salinomycin affected the ileal microbiota of broiler chickens at 7, 14, 21, and 35 days using PCR‑DGGE, sequencing, and culture. Age, dietary fat source, and antibiotic supplementation altered ileal microflora, with older birds showing more streptococci, enterobacteria, and *C.

Abstract

ABSTRACT The effect of dietary fat source (soy oil or a mixture of lard and tallow) and dietary supplementation with antibiotics (a combination of avilamycin at 10 mg kg of feed −1 and salinomycin at 40 mg kg of feed −1 ) on the bacterial community in the ileum of broiler chickens at different ages (7, 14, 21, and 35 days) was studied using PCR with denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (DGGE) analysis and bacteriological culture. The bacterial origin of fragments in DGGE profiles was identified by sequencing. Bacterial enumeration results, together with PCR-DGGE profiles, showed that the composition of the microflora was age dependent and influenced by dietary fat source and antibiotic supplementation. An increased incidence of streptococci, enterobacteria, and Clostridium perfringens with age of the chickens was demonstrated. Lactobacilli and C. perfringens were the bacterial groups most strongly affected by the dietary treatments. Moreover, different strains (clonal variants of the alpha-toxin gene) of C. perfringens type A were detected in response to age, dietary fat source, and dietary supplementation with antibiotics.

References

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