Abstract

Increasing antibiotic resistance in bacteria that cause zoonotic infections is a major problem for farmers rearing animals for food as well as for consumers who eat the contaminated meat resulting in food-borne infections. Bacteriophages incorporated in animal feed may help reduce carriage and infections in animals including chickens and pigs. There are, however, unmet challenges in protecting phages from processing stresses e.g., during animal feed pelleting operations and during transit of phages through the acidic gastric environment. Core-shell capsules were produced using a concentric nozzle and commercially available encapsulation equipment to fabricate capsules with phages formulated in an oil-in-water microemulsion in the core. pH-responsive capsules released the encapsulated phage cargo within 10–30 min triggered by changes in local environmental pH typically found in the lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract of animals. Acid stability of phages exposed to pH values as low as pH 1 was demonstrated. Encapsulated phages were able to withstand exposure to 95 °C wet heat thermal stress for up to 120 s, conditions typically encountered during feed pellet extrusion processing. Free phages were inactivated within 15 s under these conditions. The present study demonstrates that encapsulation of bacteriophages in core-shell pH-responsive capsules with water-in-oil emulsified phages in the core significantly improves phage viability upon exposure to processing and environmental stresses that require consideration during production of animal feed and application in animals for biocontrol. The results from this study should help guide future development of phage formulations suitable for use in animal feed for animal biocontrol applications.

Highlights

  • Published: 11 June 2021Incidences of severe gastrointestinal (GI) bacterial infections in humans are rising due to the emergence of antibiotic resistance in bacteria

  • The animal feed industry relies on antibiotics for zoonotic disease control and animal welfare; antibiotics are used in significant quantities

  • With sub-therapeutic doses facilitating the rise of antibiotic resistance, animals could be acting as a reservoir for untreatable bacterial infections, transmitting through the food chain and causing outbreaks of infections [2]

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Summary

Introduction

Incidences of severe gastrointestinal (GI) bacterial infections in humans are rising due to the emergence of antibiotic resistance in bacteria. The animal feed industry relies on antibiotics for zoonotic disease control and animal welfare; antibiotics are used in significant quantities. Common farming practices include antibiotic treatment of all animals within the group after the clinical onset of symptoms across a minority of the population. Antibiotic administration is routinely provided through animal feed/water, enabling entire groups of animals to be treated with maximum time efficiency. With sub-therapeutic doses facilitating the rise of antibiotic resistance, animals could be acting as a reservoir for untreatable bacterial infections, transmitting through the food chain and causing outbreaks of infections [2]. Ten of the 16 antimicrobials amplified resistance or virulence gene transfer, demonstrating the urgent present need for an antibiotic alternative to prevent long-term health implications for society

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