The healthy intestinal microbiota of shrimp can be used as an indicator sustainable shrimp production. In this study, the integrated of metagenomic and screening probiotic approach from healthy Litopenaeus vannamei intestines in differing stages was studied to find novel indigenous probiotics. The microbiota from intestine of naupli, post larva (PL-10), juvenile (40 days), and adult (80 days) of Pacific white shrimp were characterized using a high-quality sequence of V3–V4 of 16S rRNA gene as the hypervariable region. The classifiable sequence number was detected in 54 phyla. Several core intestine bacteria, 35 of these 557 genera, have a prevalence >10 sequences across all samples. We found microbiota were different taxa in the difference stages, such as Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Bacteriodetes. The top 10 most abundant genera were Vibrio, Pseudoalteromonas, Spingomonas, Marinibacterium, Klebsiella, Alteromonas, Aestuaribacter, Shimia, Stenotrophomonas, and Ruegeria. Microbiota profiling based on a metagenomic approach was integrated with screening assessment for pathogenicity, antagonistic activity with Vibrio parahaemolyticus Vp5, antibiotic resistance, and digestive enzyme activities. As their assessment activity, several screened culturable bacteria were 19 of these 84 isolates. Three isolates with high activities (P < 0.05) found as novel indigenous probiotics were Shewanella algae A1, Shewanella algae A3, and Vibrio diabolicus UB3. Integrating metagenomic and screening methods was a new signature for the isolating novel indigenous probiotics in Pacific white shrimp.
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