Peer-reviewed veterinary case report
Broiler litter moisture and trace metals contribute to the persistence ofstrains that harbor large plasmids carrying siderophores.
- Journal:
- Applied and environmental microbiology
- Year:
- 2025
- Authors:
- Oladeinde, Adelumola et al.
- Affiliation:
- U.S. National Poultry Research Center · United States
Abstract
Broiler litter sampling has proven to be an effective method for determining thestatus of a broiler chicken flock and understanding the ecology ofprior to harvest. In this study, we investigated the ecology ofwithin the litter (= 224) from two commercial broiler houses in the United States. We employed culture enrichment methods and quantitative polymerase chain reaction to determine the prevalence and load ofand utilized antimicrobial susceptibility testing and whole-genome sequencing (WGS) to characterize select isolates. Additionally, we applied machine learning algorithms andexperiments to identify environmental selective pressures that may contribute to the persistence ofin litter. Our findings indicate that the prevalence and abundance ofin broiler litter are influenced by the downtime between flocks as well as by the flock raised on the litter. A Decision Tree Classifier model developed demonstrated that the moisture in the caked part of litter was the most influential environmental parameter for predicting the prevalence of viable. WGS analysis revealed that Typhimurium, Infantis, and Kentucky strains that harbored large self-conjugative plasmids encoding fitness factors for iron siderophore production were the dominantpopulation found in litter, and exposure to iron-limiting and copper-enriched culture media affectedgrowth. Our results suggest that trace metals may select for siderophores harbored on plasmids, and interventions that reduce litter moisture can potentially curtail the persistence ofin pre-harvest environments.IMPORTANCEBroiler chicken meat is the most consumed protein worldwide, and global poultry imports are projected to reach 17.5 million tons by 2031. To raise billions of chickens, litter is reused multiple times by the top global producers and exporters of chicken (Brazil and the United States). Chickens are in continuous contact with litter and depend on it for warmth and coprophagy. Consequently, litter serves as a major route for pathogens such asto infect chickens, making it crucial to understand the environmental and genetic selective pressures that might explain why certainstrains persist on broiler farms more than others. In this study, we demonstrated thatstrains that harbored siderophores on large conjugative plasmids persisted in litter and suggested that reducing litter moisture would significantly controlprevalence. However, a complete eradication of persistingstrains will require novel, innovative, and multifaceted approaches.
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Search related cases →Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40079597/