Microorganisms (Jan 2022)

Probiotic Lactobacilli Do Not Protect Chickens against <i>Salmonella</i> Enteritidis Infection by Competitive Exclusion in the Intestinal Tract but in Feed, Outside the Chicken Host

  • Helena Juricova,
  • Jitka Matiasovicova,
  • Marcela Faldynova,
  • Alena Sebkova,
  • Tereza Kubasova,
  • Hana Prikrylova,
  • Daniela Karasova,
  • Magdalena Crhanova,
  • Hana Havlickova,
  • Ivan Rychlik

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms10020219
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. 219

Abstract

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Lactobacilli are commonly used as probiotics in poultry to improve production parameters and to increase chicken resistance to enteric infections. However, lactobacilli do not efficiently colonise the chicken intestinal tract, and also, their anti-infection effect in vivo is sometimes questionable. In this study, we therefore evaluated the potential of a mixture of four Lactobacillus species (L. salivarius, L. reuteri, L. ingluviei and L. alvi) for the protection of chickens against Salmonella Enteritidis infection. Whenever the chickens were inoculated by lactobacilli and S. Enteritidis separately, there was no protective effect of lactobacilli. This means that when lactobacilli and S. Enteritidis are exposed to each other as late as in the crop of chickens, lactobacilli did not influence chicken resistance to S. Enteritidis at all. The only positive effect was recorded when the mixture of lactobacilli and S. Enteritidis was used for the inoculation of feed and the feed was anaerobically fermented for 1 to 5 days. In this case, chickens fed such a diet remained S. Enteritidis negative. In vitro experiments showed that the protective effect was caused by acidification of feed down to pH 4.6 due to lactobacilli fermentation and was associated with S. Enteritidis inactivation. The probiotic effect of lactobacilli was thus expressed in the feed, outside the chicken host.

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