Abstract
The concept of successional trajectories describes how small differences in initial community composition can magnify through time and lead to significant differences in mature communities. For many animals, the types and sources of early-life exposures to microbes have been shown to have significant and long-lasting effects on the community structure and/or function of the microbiome. In modern commercial poultry production, chicks are reared as a single age cohort and do not directly encounter adult birds. This scenario is likely to initiate a trajectory of microbial community development that is significantly different than non-industrial settings where chicks are exposed to a much broader range of environmental and fecal inocula; however, the comparative effects of these two scenarios on microbiome development and function remain largely unknown. In this work, we performed serial transfers of cecal material through multiple generations of birds to first determine if serial transfers exploiting the ceca in vivo, rather than the external environment or artificial incubations, can produce a stable microbial community. Subsequently, we compared microbiome development between chicks receiving this passaged, i.e. host-selected, cecal material orally, versus an environmental inoculum, to test the hypothesis that the first exposure of newly hatched chicks to microbes determines early GI microbiome structure and may have longer-lasting effects on bird health and development. Cecal microbiome dynamics and bird weights were tracked for a two-week period, with half of the birds in each treatment group exposed to a pathogen challenge at 7 days of age. We report that: i) a relatively stable community was derived after a single passage of transplanted cecal material, ii) this cecal inoculum significantly but ephemerally altered community structure relative to the environmental inoculum and PBS controls, and iii) either microbiome transplant administered at day-of-hatch appeared to have some protective effects against pathogen challenge relative to uninoculated controls. Differentially abundant taxa identified across treatment types may inform future studies aimed at identifying strains associated with beneficial phenotypes.
Highlights
Since the middle of the last century, antimicrobial growth promoters (AGPs), in-feed antibiotics at sub-therapeutic concentrations, have been commonly used in commercial broiler chicken farming to improve efficiency of production [1,2,3]
This stable community derived from serial passages through young chicken ceca was subsequently used as the cecal microbiome transplants (CMT) inoculum in this study
We used microbiome transplants (MTs) to better understand microbiome establishment from diverse inocula and to identify specific strains associated with pathogen tolerance
Summary
Since the middle of the last century, antimicrobial growth promoters (AGPs), in-feed antibiotics at sub-therapeutic concentrations, have been commonly used in commercial broiler chicken farming to improve efficiency of production [1,2,3]. Promising alternatives to AGPs include the modulation of the chicken GI microbiome with prebiotics such as starches in the diet, antimicrobials such as phytochemicals or bacteriophages, and mono- or mixed-culture probiotics, as reviewed elsewhere e.g. A better understanding of specific bacterial strains associated with desirable phenotypes could help identify effective probiotic alternatives to AGPs and improve understanding of their modes of action
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