1. Antimicrobial activity of lupulone against Clostridium perfringens in the chicken intestinal tract jejunum and caecum.
- Author
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G. R. Siragusa, G. J. Haas, P. D. Matthews, R. J. Smith, R. J. Buhr, N. M. Dale, and M. G. Wise
- Subjects
CLOSTRIDIUM ,ANTIBIOTICS ,BACILLACEAE ,CLOSTRIDIUM perfringens - Abstract
Objectives Owing to the spread of antibiotic resistance among human infectious agents, there is a need to research antibiotic alternatives for use in animal agricultural systems. Antibiotic-free broiler chicken production systems are known to suffer from frequent outbreaks of necrotic enteritis due in part to pathogenic type A Clostridium perfringens. Hop (Humulus lupulus) bitter acids are known to possess potent antimicrobial activity. Lupulone was evaluated for in vivo antimicrobial activity to inhibit C. perfringens in a chick gastrointestinal colonization model. Methods Using a week-2 per os inoculated C. perfringens chicken colonization model, C. perfringens counts in mid-intestinal and caecal contents were compared between chickens administered lupulone at 62.5, 125 and 250 ppm in drinking water versus 0 ppm control. Results At day 22, post-hatch intestinal C. perfringens counts of lupulone-treated chickens were significantly lower (P Conclusions Lupulone administered through water inhibits gastrointestinal levels of inoculated pathogenic clostridia within the chicken gastrointestinal tract. Lupulone was effective within the chemically complex mixture of material within the gastrointestinal tract, thereby making this agent a target of further research as an antibiotic alternative for this and possibly other intestinal infections. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
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