PLoS ONE (Jan 2021)

Millet-based supplement restored gut microbial diversity of acute malnourished pigs.

  • Xuejing Li,
  • Yan Hui,
  • Bingfeng Leng,
  • Junli Ren,
  • Yanni Song,
  • Lianqiang Che,
  • Xi Peng,
  • Baojia Huang,
  • Songling Liu,
  • Lin Li,
  • Dennis Sandris Nielsen,
  • Yong Li,
  • Xiaoshuang Dai,
  • Shancen Zhao

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0250423
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. e0250423

Abstract

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The tight association between malnutrition and gut microbiota (GM) dysbiosis enables microbiota-targeting intervention to be a promising strategy. Thus, we used a malnourished pig model to investigate the host response and GM alterations under different diet supplementation strategies. Pigs at age of 4 weeks were fed with pure maize diet to induce malnutrition symptoms, and followed by continuous feeding with maize (Maize, n = 8) or re-feeding using either corn-soy-blend (CSB+, n = 10) or millet-soy-blend based (MSB+, n = 10) supplementary food for 3 weeks. Meanwhile, 8 pigs were fed on a standard formulated ration as control (Ref). The effect of nutritional supplementation was assessed by the growth status, blood chemistry, gastrointestinal pathology, mucosal microbiota composition and colon production of short-chain fatty acids. Compared with purely maize-fed pigs, both CSB+ and MSB+ elevated the concentrations of total protein and globulin in blood. These pigs still showed most malnutrition symptoms after the food intervention period. MSB+ had superior influence on the GM development, exhibiting better performance in both structural and functional aspects. MSB+ pigs were colonized by less Proteobacteria but more Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes and Lachnospira spp. Pearson's correlation analysis indicated a strong correlation between the abundance of mucosal e.g., Faecalibacterium and Lachnospira spp. and body weight, crown-rump length and total serum protein. In conclusion, the malnutrition symptoms were accompanied by an aberrant GM, and millet-based nutritional supplementation showed promising potentials to restore the reduced GM diversity implicated in pig malnutrition.