Frontiers in Veterinary Science (Oct 2023)

Exploring the effects of lysozyme dietary supplementation on laying hens: performance, egg quality, and immune response

  • Daniel Sindaye,
  • Daniel Sindaye,
  • Zaili Xiao,
  • Chaoyu Wen,
  • Kang Yang,
  • Limeng Zhang,
  • Pinfeng Liao,
  • Fan Zhang,
  • Zhongquan Xin,
  • Shansong He,
  • Shibin Ye,
  • Dan Guo,
  • Suqin Hang,
  • Shehata Zeid,
  • Baichuan Deng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fvets.2023.1273372
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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An experiment was conducted to evaluate the dietary supplementation with lysozyme's impacts on laying performance, egg quality, biochemical analysis, body immunity, and intestinal morphology. A total of 720 Jingfen No. 1 laying hens (53 weeks old) were randomly assigned into five groups, with six replicates in each group and 24 hens per replicate. The basal diet was administered to the laying hens in the control group, and it was supplemented with 100, 200, 300, or 400 mg/kg of lysozyme (purity of 10% and an enzyme activity of 3,110 U/mg) for other groups. The preliminary observation of the laying rate lasted for 4 weeks, and the experimental period lasted for 8 weeks. The findings demonstrated that lysozyme might enhance production performance by lowering the rate of sand-shelled eggs (P < 0.05), particularly 200 and 300 mg/kg compared with the control group. Lysozyme did not show any negative effect on egg quality or the health of laying hens (P > 0.05). Lysozyme administration in the diet could improve intestinal morphology, immune efficiency, and nutritional digestibility in laying hens when compared with the control group (P < 0.05). These observations showed that lysozyme is safe to use as a feed supplement for the production of laying hens. Dietary supplementation with 200 to 300 mg/kg lysozyme should be suggested to farmers as a proper level of feed additive in laying hens breeding.

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