Abstract

Arthrospira platensis is one of the candidates expected to replace antibiotics by its immunostimulatory effects in broiler industry, but the evaluation aimed at field applications is not enough. Here, we measured general immunological indicators such as specific antibody responses against sheep red blood cell and Brucella abortus, serum immunoglobulin concentrations and monocyte phagocytic capacity of broiler chickens, which assigned to four dietary treatment groups: A. platensis at 0, 0.01, 0.1 and 1% was added to their normal feed. Then, the 0.01 to 1% groups were compared to the 0% group. In specific antibody responses, the 0.1% group maintained a higher antibody titer against sheep red blood cells, while the 0.01% group did against Brucella abortus after the secondary response. Regarding serum immunoglobulin concentrations, IgG levels of the 0.1 and 1% groups were significantly higher, while IgA levels showed no significant differences. In the phagocytosis assay, each supplemented group showed an increase of the phagocytic capacity of blood monocytes. In several tests, the 1% group presented heteroscedasticity, i.e., some individuals showed high responses, while others presented poor responses. These observations indicate that dietary A. platensis enhances not systemic but some particular immune responses in broiler chickens and a high level of supplementation may inhibit this effect. Therefore, a dietary supplementation of 0.1% of A. platensis with some immunomodulatory substances that enhance mucosal immunity is suitable for upregulating the systemic immune response in broiler chickens.

Highlights

  • Antimicrobial agents have been used extensively in the broiler chicken industry for a long time and contributed in reducing mortality caused by infectious diseases, thereby improving productivity

  • We evaluate the possibility of field applications of dietary A. platensis as an alternative to antibiotics by reference to antibody responses of two specific antigens sheep Red Blood Cells (sRBC) and Brucella abortus (BA), serum IgG and IgA levels and phagocytic capacity of peripheral monocytes

  • The 0.1% group showed a significantly higher titer than the 0% group at 6 weeks of age in the sRBC test, while the 0.01% group did in the BA test

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Summary

Introduction

Antimicrobial agents have been used extensively in the broiler chicken industry for a long time and contributed in reducing mortality caused by infectious diseases, thereby improving productivity. In recent years, the health authorities of various countries have advocated reductions in the amount of antibiotics used to prevent the increase in microbial resistance (Dibner and Richards, 2005). In Japan, according to the Japanese Veterinary Antimicrobial Resistance Monitoring System, drug-resistant strains have been constantly isolated from healthy broiler chickens (Asai et al, 2006; Harada and Asai, 2010) and the Ministry of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries noticed that antimicrobial therapy against poultry-derived bacterial infections in humans is difficult due to their drug resistance. The high usage of new quinolones increases the risk of inducing resistant Campylobacter spp. The broiler chicken industry has been actively looking for alternatives to antibiotics. Arthrospira platensis (A. platensis), known as spirulina (blue-green alga), is one of the candidates

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