Abstract

BackgroundThe caecal microbiota plays a key role in chicken health and performance, influencing digestion and absorption of nutrients, and contributing to defence against colonisation by invading pathogens. Measures of productivity and resistance to pathogen colonisation are directly influenced by chicken genotype, but host driven variation in microbiome structure is also likely to exert a considerable indirect influence.MethodsHere, we define the caecal microbiome of indigenous Indian Aseel and Kadaknath chicken breeds and compare them with the global commercial broiler Cobb400 and Ross 308 lines using 16S rDNA V3-V4 hypervariable amplicon sequencing.ResultsEach caecal microbiome was dominated by the genera Bacteroides, unclassified bacteria, unclassified Clostridiales, Clostridium, Alistipes, Faecalibacterium, Eubacterium and Blautia. Geographic location (a measure recognised to include variation in environmental and climatic factors, but also likely to feature varied management practices) and chicken line/breed were both found to exert significant impacts (p < 0.05) on caecal microbiome composition. Linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe) revealed 42 breed-specific biomarkers in the chicken lines reared under controlled conditions at two different locations.ConclusionChicken breed-specific variation in bacterial occurrence, correlation between genera and clustering of operational taxonomic units indicate scope for quantitative genetic analysis and the possibility of selective breeding of chickens for defined enteric microbiota.

Highlights

  • The caecal microbiota plays a key role in chicken health and performance, influencing digestion and absorption of nutrients, and contributing to defence against colonisation by invading pathogens

  • In line with other next-generation sequencing (NGS) microbiome studies [9,10,11,12,13,14,15], we have previously identified Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes and Actinobacteria as highly abundant phyla within chicken caecal populations, while functional metagenomics analysis revealed enrichment of sequences corresponding to carbohydrate metabolism [16]

  • The study presented here provides an introduction to chicken breed-specific variation in enteric bacterial occurrence and diversity

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Summary

Introduction

The caecal microbiota plays a key role in chicken health and performance, influencing digestion and absorption of nutrients, and contributing to defence against colonisation by invading pathogens. Measures of productivity and resistance to pathogen colonisation are directly influenced by chicken genotype, but host driven variation in microbiome structure is likely to exert a considerable indirect influence. Chickens are the most numerous livestock in the world, with relatively low production costs and highly efficient food conversion. The importance of the caecal microbiome to chicken health and productivity has long been recognised, especially in food conversion, resistance to disease and colonisation by zoonotic pathogens [5,6,7,8]. The influence of host genetics on caecal microbiome structure is unclear [17,18,19]

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