Abstract
As a consequence of rapid growth, broiler chickens are more susceptible to infection as well as bone fractures that result in birds being culled. Intestinal infection/inflammation has been demonstrated to promote bone loss in mice and humans. Given this link, we hypothesize that therapeutics that target the gut can benefit bone health. To test this, we infected broiler chickens (7 days old) with Salmonella and treated the birds with or without MDY, a non-absorbable mucus supplement known to benefit intestinal health, from day 1–21 or from day 14–21. Chicken femoral trabecular and cortical bone parameters were analyzed by microcomputed tomography at 21 days. Birds infected with Salmonella displayed significant trabecular bone loss and bone microarchitecture abnormalities that were specific to the femoral neck region, a common site of fracture in chickens. Histological analyses of the chicken bone indicated an increase in osteoclast surface/bone surface in this area indicating that infection-induced bone resorption likely causes the bone loss. Of great interest, treatment with MDY effectively prevented broiler chicken bone loss and architectural changes when given chronically throughout the experiment or for only a week after infection. The latter suggests that MDY may not only prevent bone loss but reverse bone loss. MDY also increased cortical bone mineral density in Salmonella-treated chickens. Taken together, our studies demonstrate that Salmonella-induced bone loss in broiler chickens is prevented by oral MDY.
Highlights
In the US, in 2010, approximately 36.9 billion pounds of broilers were sold for a retail value of 45 billion dollars and 6.8 billion pounds were exported
While most poultry in the US have been grown under chronic sub-therapeutic antibiotic treatment, there has been a push for antibiotic-free chickens to reduce the risk of developing antibiotic resistant bacteria and to promote chemical-free chicken meat
We show that Salmonella infection, on its own, is sufficient to cause broiler chicken femoral neck bone loss
Summary
In the US, in 2010, approximately 36.9 billion pounds of broilers were sold for a retail value of 45 billion dollars and 6.8 billion pounds were exported (according to uspoultry.org). Given the effect of high molecular weight PEGs in strengthening the intestinal barrier (Teramura et al, 2008; Valuckaite et al, 2009, 2013; Oltean et al, 2012, 2015), we hypothesized that MDY may benefit the bone health of broiler chicks infected with Salmonella.
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