PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Identification of a microbial sub-community from the feral chicken gut that reducescolonization and improves gut health in a gnotobiotic chicken model.

Journal:
Microbiology spectrum
Year:
2024
Authors:
Wongkuna, Supapit et al.
Affiliation:
Department of Biochemistry

Abstract

A complex microbial community in the gut may prevent the colonization of enteric pathogens such as. Some individual or a combination of species in the gut may confer colonization resistance against. To gain a better understanding of the colonization resistance against, we isolated a library of 1,300 bacterial strains from feral chicken gut microbiota which represented a total of 51 species. Using a co-culture assay, we screened the representative species from this library and identified 30 species that inhibitedsubspecies enterica serovar Typhimurium. To improve theinhibition capacity, from a pool of fast-growing species, we formulated 66 bacterial blends, each of which composed of 10 species. Bacterial blends were more efficient in inhibitingas compared to individual species. The blend that showed maximum inhibition (Mix10) also inhibited other serotypes offrequently found in poultry. Theeffect of Mix10 was examined in a gnotobiotic and conventional chicken model. The Mix10 consortium significantly reducedload at day 2 post-infection in gnotobiotic chicken model and decreased intestinal tissue damage and inflammation in both models. Cell-free supernatant of Mix10 did not showinhibition, indicating that Mix10 inhibitsthrough either nutritional competition, competitive exclusion, or through reinforcement of host immunity. Out of 10 species, 3 species in Mix10 did not colonize, while 3 species constituted more than 70% of the community. Two of these species were previously uncultured bacteria. Our approach could be used as a high-throughput screening system to identify additional bacterial sub-communities that confer colonization resistance against enteric pathogens and its effect on the host.IMPORTANCEcolonization in chicken and human infections originating fromcontaminated poultry is a significant problem. Poultry has been identified as the most common food linked to enteric pathogen outbreaks in the United States. Since multi-drug-resistantoften colonize chicken and cause human infections, methods to controlcolonization in poultry are needed. The method we describe here could form the basis of developing gut microbiota-derived bacterial blends as a microbial ecosystem therapeutic against.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38315031/