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Research Note: Therapeutic effect of a Salmonella phage combination on chicks infected with Salmonella Typhimurium

Authors :
Guijuan Hao
Peiyong Li
Jiaqi Huang
Ketong Cui
Lu Liang
Fang Lin
Zhiyuan Lu
Shuhong Sun
Source :
Poultry Science, Vol 102, Iss 7, Pp 102715- (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2023.

Abstract

ABSTRACT: Antibiotic treatment failure is increasingly encountered for the emergence of pandrug-resistant isolates, including the prototypical broad-host-range Salmonella enterica serovar (S.) Typhimurium, which mainly transmitted to humans through poultry products. In this study we explored the therapeutic potential of a Salmonella phage composition containing a virulent phage and a nonproductive phage that does not produce progeny phage against chicks infected with a pandrug-resistant S. Typhimurium strain of avian origin. After approximately 107 CFU of S. Typhimurium strain ST149 were administrated to chicks by intraperitoneal injection, the phage combination (∼108 PFU) was gavaged at 8-h, 32-h, and 54-h postinfection. At d 10 postinfection, phage treatment completely protected chicks from Salmonella-induced death compared to 91.7% survival in the Salmonella challenge group. In addition, phage treatment also greatly reduced the bacterial load in various organs, with Salmonella colonization levels decreasing more significantly in spleen and bursa than in liver and cecal contents, possibly due to higher phage titers in these immune organs. However, phages could not alleviate the decreased body weight gain and the enlargement of spleen and bursa of infected chicks. Further examination of the bacterial flora in the cecal contents of chicks found that S. Typhimurium infection caused a remarkable decrease in abundance of Clostridia vadin BB60 group and Mollicutes RF39 (the dominant genus in chicks), making Lactobacillus the dominate genus. Although phage treatment partially restored the decline of Clostridia vadin BB60 group and Mollicutes RF39 and increased abundance of Lactobacillus caused by S. Typhimurium infection, Fournierella that may aggravate intestinal inflammation became the major genus, followed by increased Escherichia-Shigella as the second dominate bacterial genus. These results suggested that successive phage treatment modulated the structural composition and abundance of bacterial communities, but failed to normalize the intestinal microbiome disrupted by S. Typhimurium infection. Phages need to be combined with other means to control the spread of S. Typhimurium in poultry.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00325791
Volume :
102
Issue :
7
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Poultry Science
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b1b3fb6181a43f8bf5fde41fc61197d
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psj.2023.102715