Bacillus spp. Probiotic Strains as a Potential Tool for Limiting the Use of Antibiotics, and Improving the Growth and Health of Pigs and Chickens

The pressure to increasingly optimize the breeding of livestock monogastric animals resulted in antimicrobials often being misused in an attempt to improve growth performance and counteract diseases in these animals, leading to an increase in the problem of antibiotic resistance. To tackle this prob...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inFrontiers in microbiology Vol. 13; p. 801827
Main Authors Luise, Diana, Bosi, Paolo, Raff, Lena, Amatucci, Laura, Virdis, Sara, Trevisi, Paolo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 07.02.2022
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:The pressure to increasingly optimize the breeding of livestock monogastric animals resulted in antimicrobials often being misused in an attempt to improve growth performance and counteract diseases in these animals, leading to an increase in the problem of antibiotic resistance. To tackle this problem, the use of probiotics, also known as direct in-feed microbials (DFM), seems to be one of the most promising strategies. Among probiotics, the interest in strains has been intensively increased in recent decades in pigs and poultry. The aim of the present review was to evaluate the effectiveness of strains as probiotics and as a potential strategy for reducing the misuse of antibiotics in monogastric animals. Thus, the potential modes of action, and the effects on the performance and health of pigs (weaning pigs, lactation and gestation sows) and broilers are discussed. These searches yielded 131 articles (published before January 2021). The present review showed that strains could favor growth in terms of the average daily gain (ADG) of post-weaning piglets and broilers, and reduce the incidence of post-weaning diarrhea in pigs by 30% and mortality in broilers by 6-8%. The benefits of strains on these parameters showed results comparable to the benefit obtained by the use of antibiotics. Furthermore, the use of strains gives promising results in enhancing the local adaptative immune response and in reducing the oxidative stress of broilers. Fewer data were available regarding the effect on sows. Discordant effects have been reported regarding the effect on body weight (BW) and feed intake while a number of studies have supported the hypothesis that feeding probiotics to sows could benefit their reproductive performance, namely the BW and ADG of the litters. Taken all the above-mentioned facts together, this review confirmed the effectiveness of strains as probiotics in young pigs and broilers, favoring their health and contributing to a reduction in the misuse of direct in-feed antibiotics. The continuous development and research regarding probiotics will support a decrease in the misuse of antibiotics in livestock production in order to endorse a more sustainable rearing system in the near future.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-3
content type line 23
ObjectType-Review-1
This article was submitted to Microbiotechnology, a section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology
Reviewed by: Tarique Hussain, Nuclear Institute for Agriculture and Biology, Pakistan; Abdelazeem Algammal, Suez Canal University, Egypt
Edited by: Ales Lapanje, Institut Jožef Stefan (IJS), Slovenia
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2022.801827