4.2 Article

An interdisciplinary study on the mode of action of probiotics in pigs

Journal

JOURNAL OF ANIMAL AND FEED SCIENCES
Volume 19, Issue 2, Pages 230-243

Publisher

KIELANOWSKI INST ANIMAL PHYSIOLOGY NUTRITION
DOI: 10.22358/jafs/66284/2010

Keywords

pigs; probiotics; Enterococcus faecium; Bacillus versus

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An interdisciplinary research group granted by the German Research Foundation (FOR 438) tested various hypotheses and tired to develop a model for the mode of action of probiotics in pigs. The study included the fields of animal nutrition/digestion physiology, anatomy and histology of the intestinal mucosa, transport and secretory properties of the mucosa, microbiology of the intestinal tract, immune system (classes of intraepithelial lymphocytes, Immoral responses), gene expression of the mucosa and finally the in vitro and in vivo resistance against infection with Salmonella. Five trials with ten sows per treatment each and their piglets and two probiotic strains were included in this study. The studied bacterial strains were Enterococcus faecium NCIMB 10415 and Bacillus cereus var. toyoi NCIMB 40112. Concluding from our studies and the published data of others, the effects of probiotics on performance are rarely significant. However, with one exception the incidence of post-weaning diarrhoea under the effect of both probiotics was significantly reduced in the trials of the research group. Furthermore, the identification frequency of various E. coli sero-pathovars relevant in post weaning diarrhoea was reduced in these animals. On the other hand, no significant modifications were found for the morphology and histology of the intestinal mucosa and also not on transport properties of this tissue. A further important finding was that the mode of action for probiotics is not unique but species or even strain specific. Most probably the studied probiotics act directly and/or via modifications of the intestinal microbiota on the immune system (intraepithelial lymphocyte population).

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