Abstract
The impacts of antibiotic treatment and dosing regimen of an antibiotic on the swine respiratory microbiota are poorly defined. To begin to address this, this study characterized the impact of oxytetracycline administration, given either parenterally or in feed, on the diversity of the nasal and tonsil microbiotas of post-weaned pigs over a two-week period. One group received a single intramuscular injection (IM) of oxytetracycline, the second was treated with oxytetracycline mixed in feed (IF), and the control group received non-medicated (NON) feed. Nasal samples were collected on days 0 (before start of treatment), 4, 7, 11, and 14. Tonsil tissue samples were collected from a subset of pigs selected for necropsy on days 4, 7, and 14. The results showed that the tonsil microbiota was stable regardless of antibiotic treatment. In contrast, the nasal bacterial diversity decreased for both oxytetracycline-treated groups compared to NON. The IF group also exhibited decreased diversity on more days than the IM group. The nasal bacterial community structures of the antibiotic treatment groups were significantly different from the NON group that persisted from day 4 until day 7 for the IM group, and up until day 11 for the IF group. This included relative increased abundances of Actinobacillus and Streptococcus, and relative decreased abundances of multiple commensal genera. The microbiota of the IF group was also more disturbed than the microbiota of the IM group, relative to NON. This study revealed that short-term exposure to broad-spectrum antibiotics like oxytetracycline can disturb the upper respiratory microbiota, and the dosing regimen has differential effects on the microbiota.
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