Animals (Sep 2023)

Effects of Dietary <i>Bacillus subtilis</i> HC6 on Growth Performance, Antioxidant Capacity, Immunity, and Intestinal Health in Broilers

  • Shun Liu,
  • Gengsheng Xiao,
  • Qi Wang,
  • Qingyang Zhang,
  • Jinpeng Tian,
  • Weifen Li,
  • Li Gong

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ani13182915
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 18
p. 2915

Abstract

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This study aimed to investigate the impact of Bacillus subtilis HC6 on the growth performance, immunity, antioxidant capacity, and intestinal health of broilers. A total of 180 one-day-old white feather broilers were randomly divided into two experimental groups, each comprising six replicates of fifteen chicks from 1 to 50 d of age. The groups were either fed a basal diet (CON) or the same diet supplemented with 5 × 108 cfu/kg of Bacillus subtilis HC6 (BS). Our results indicated that compared with the CON, dietary supplementation with BS increased feed efficiency during d 21–50 and d 1–50 (p p p Bacteroidales_unclassified (genus) and Olsenella (genus), and decreased the abundance of genera Alistipes on day 50, which identified a strong correlation with FCR, serum differential metabolites, or differential gene expression in the jejunal mucosa by spearman correlation analysis. The PICRUSt2 analysis revealed that supplementation with BS enriched the pathways related to xenobiotics biodegradation and metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, energy metabolism, signaling molecules and interaction, the digestive system, and transport and catabolism. These results demonstrated that dietary BS increased feed efficiency, antioxidant capacity, and the mRNA expression of pro-inflammatory cytokines in the jejunal mucosa; and decreased the activity of diamine oxidase in serum, which might be attributed to the modulation of community composition and the functions of cecal microbiota in white-feathered broilers.

Keywords