| Literature DB >> 29930711 |
Paulina Markowiak1, Katarzyna Śliżewska1.
Abstract
Along with the intensive development of methods of livestock breeding, breeders' expectations are growing concerning feed additives that would guarantee such results as accelerating growth rate, protection of health from pathogenic infections and improvement of other production parameters such as: absorption of feed and quality of meat, milk, eggs. The main reason for their application would be a strive to achieve some beneficial effects comparable to those of antibiotic-based growth stimulators, banned on 01 January 2006. High hopes are being associated with the use of probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics. Used mainly for maintenance of the equilibrium of the intestinal microbiota of livestock, they turn out to be an effective method in fight against pathogens posing a threat for both animals and consumers. This paper discusses definitions of probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics. Criteria that have to be met by those kinds of formulas are also presented. The paper offers a list of the most commonly used probiotics and prebiotics and some examples of their combinations in synbiotic formulas used in animal feeding. Examples of available study results on the effect of probiotics, prebiotics and synbiotics on animal health are also summarised.Entities:
Keywords: Animal health; Prebiotics; Probiotic bacteria; Synbiotics
Year: 2018 PMID: 29930711 PMCID: PMC5989473 DOI: 10.1186/s13099-018-0250-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Pathog ISSN: 1757-4749 Impact factor: 4.181
Definitions of probiotics
| Year | Definitions |
|---|---|
| 1965 | A substance secreted by one microorganism which stimulates the growth of another [ |
| 1971 | Tissue extracts which stimulate microbial growth [ |
| 1974 | Organisms and substances that contribute to intestinal microbial balance [ |
| 1989 | Live microbial feed supplement which beneficially affects the host animal by improving microbial balance [ |
| 1992 | Viable mono- or mixed culture of live microorganisms which, applied to animals or man, have a beneficial effect on the host by improving the properties of the indigenous microflora [ |
| 1996 | A live microbial culture or cultured dairy product that beneficially influences the health and nutrition of the host [ |
| 1996 | Living microorganisms which, upon ingestion in certain numbers, exert health benefits beyond inherent basic nutrition [ |
| 1998 | Living microorganisms that on ingestion in certain numbers exert health benefits beyond inherent basic nutrition [ |
| 1999 | A microbial dietary adjuvant that beneficially affects the host physiology by modulating mucosal and systemic immunity, as well as improving nutritional and microbial balance in the intestinal tract [ |
| 2001 | A preparation of or a product containing viable, defined microorganisms in sufficient numbers, which alter the microflora (by implantation or colonization) in a compartment of the host and by that exert beneficial health effect in this host [ |
| 2002 | Live strains of strictly selected microorganisms which, when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host [ |
| 2004 | Preparation of viable microorganisms that is consumed by humans or other animals with the aim of inducing beneficial effects by qualitatively or quantitatively influencing their gut microflora and/or modifying their immune status [ |
| 2009 | Live microorganisms, which when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host [ |
| 2013 | Live strains of strictly selected microorganisms which, when administered in adequate amounts, confer a health benefit on the host [ |
Fig. 1Selection criteria and required properties of probiotic strains [15, 37]
Probiotic microorganisms mostly intended for animals [45–47]
| Type | Type | Other lactic acid bacteria | Other microorganisms |
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a QPS microorganisms
Examples of probiotic formulas used in nutrition of livestock [50–52]
| Trade name of the preparation (producer) | Microorganisms | Destination |
|---|---|---|
| Acid-Pak-4-Way (Alltech) |
| Poultry, pigs |
| Anta Pro EF (Dr. Eckel) |
| Pigs |
| Avian PAC (Soluble Loveland Industries) |
| Poultry |
| Biogen D (Bio-Gen) |
| Poultry |
| Biogen N (Bio-Gen) |
| Pigs |
| Biogen T (Bio-Gen) |
| Pigs |
| Bio Plus2B® (Chr. Hansen) |
| Pigs, calves, poultry |
| BioPlus®YC (Evonik Industries) |
| Pigs |
| B.I.O.Sol (Biochem) |
| Poultry |
| Bro-biofair (Vitality Co.) |
| Pigs |
| Calsporin (ORFFA) |
| Poultry, pigs |
| Cerbiopor |
| Pigs |
| Cernivet LBC (Cerbios) |
| Calves, pigs |
| Cerbiogalli |
| Poultry |
| Cylactin (DSM) |
| Poultry, pigs, calves |
| Doctor Em® (Biotron) | Poultry, pigs, calves | |
| Ecobiol (Norel Animal Nutrition) |
| Poultry |
| Enviva™ Pro (DANISCO Animal Nutrition) |
| Poultry |
| Enviva®MPI (DANISCO Animal Nutrition) |
| Pigs |
| Farmaflore soluble (Farm’apro) | Poultry | |
| FloraMax-B11 (Pacific Vet Group) |
| Poultry |
| GalliPro® (Evonik Industries) |
| Poultry |
| Galvit Probiotyk (Galvit) |
| Poultry |
| Lactiferm |
| Pigs, poultry, calves |
| Lavipan® (JHJ) |
| Poultry, pigs |
| LSP 122 (Alpharma) |
| Pigs |
| Microguard (PeterLab Holdings) |
| Poultry, pigs |
| MicroSource S (Agtech Products Inc.) |
| Pigs |
| Oralin® (Chevita GmbH) |
| Pigs, calves, poultry |
| PrimaLac (Star Labs, Inc.) |
| Pigs, beef, dairy, horses, poultry, deer |
| Probiomix |
| Calves, poultry |
| Probion (Woogene B&G Co. Ltd.) |
| Pigs, poultry |
| Probios (Chr Hansen) |
| Poultry, pigs |
| Probiosacc C-I |
| Calves |
| Pro-Biotyk em15® |
| Poultry, pigs, calves, horses |
| Propoul (International Company s.r.o.) |
| Poultry |
| Protexin (Protexin Probiotics International Ltd.) | Poultry, pigs, sheep, cattle, | |
| Provita LE (Schaumann) |
| Pigs, calves |
| Super-CyC (Choong Ang Biotech Co. Ltd.) |
| Poultry, cattle, horses, pigs |
| Toyocerin® (Rubinum S.A.) |
| Pigs |
| UltraCruz (Santa Cruz Animal Health) |
| Cattle, calves, poultry |
| Yea Sacc (Alltech) |
| Cattle, calves |
Examples of trials regarding the effect of probiotics on animal health
| Reference | Subjects | Microorganism | Time of administration | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absorption and utilisation of feed, diarrhoea, body weight gain | ||||
| [ | 114 Piglets | From birth to weaning (24 ± 3.2 days) | Reduced portion of subjects suffering from diarrhoea, improving performance as indicated by a higher daily weight gain | |
| [ | 118 Turkeys | Probiotic FM-B11 ( | For 3 days post birth and after approx. 6 weeks of life | Use of the selected commercial probiotics resulted in increased market BW and reduced cost of production |
| [ | 308 Broiler chickens | 21 days | Confirmed efficacy of supplementation in relation to chicken body weight gain and FCR | |
| [ | 20 Growing maltese goat kids | 7 months | Improved metabolic activity, body weight and proportions in animals receiving a probiotic | |
| [ | 400 Broiler chickens | 6 weeks | Stimulated growth, comparable to the avilamycin-containing product (ASW) | |
| [ | 33 Sows | From the 90th day of pregnancy to the 28th day of lactation | A significant improvement of feed consumption, offspring size and weight of studied animals | |
| Intestinal ecosystem imbalance, pathogenic infections | ||||
| [ | 153 Healthy piglets and 26 sows | 17 weeks (sows), 6 weeks (piglets) | Reduced pathogenic bacterial ( | |
| [ | 6 Piglets | 21 days | Increased total gut populations of lactobacilli in weaned pigs | |
| [ | 15 Pigs | 2 strains of | 30 days | Animals treated with probiotics showed reduced incidence, severity, and duration of diarrhoea. The administered probiotic bacteria improved both the clinical and microbiological outcome of |
| [ | 210 Chickens | CE culture MCE culture | No data | Significantly lower colonisation of the intestinal microflora of experimental animals fed with CE by |
| [ | Sows and piglets | 6 weeks | Modification of microflora as a result of the action of the | |
| Improved quality of meat, milk, eggs | ||||
| [ | Lambs | Probiotic YEA-SACC-1026 | During pregnancy and milk-feeding | A positive effect on the quality of milk (fat and protein content) and increased body weight of lambs |
| [ | Lambs |
| During pregnancy and milk-feeding | A positive effect on the quality of milk (fat and protein content) and increased body weight of lambs |
| [ | 109 Sows during milk-feeding | Probiotic Bio Plus 2B ( | From the day of allocation (14 days prior to the expected farrowing) up to the weaning day | A significant improvement of blood parameters (higher cholesterol and total lipid level) and of milk parameters (higher fat and protein content) during milk feeding in sows |
| [ | 32 Cows |
| 70 days | The effect on the increased ratio of protein and SNF in milk |
| [ | 480 Chickens | Probiotic Bio Plus 2B ( | 90 days | Increased production of eggs and reduced ratio of damaged eggs in probiotic-fed animals. At appropriate doses: reduced level of serum and egg-yolk cholesterol. Reduced serum triglyceride levels compared to the control and a positive effect on FCR |
ASW antibiotic-based growth stimulator, CE competitive exclusion, FCR feed conversion ratio, MCE mucosal competitive exclusion
Definitions of prebiotics
| Year | Definitions |
|---|---|
| 1995 | “Non-digested food components that, through stimulation of growth and/or activity of a single type or a limited amount of microorganisms residing in the gastrointestinal tract, improve the health condition of a host” [ |
| 2004 | “A selectively fermented component allowing specific changes in the composition and/or activity of microorganisms in the gastrointestinal tract, beneficial for host’s health and wellbeing” [ |
| 2007 | “A nonviable food component that confers a health benefit on the host associated with modulation of the microbiota” [ |
| 2010 | ‘Dietary prebiotics’ as “a selectively fermented ingredient that results in specific changes in the composition and/or activity of the gastrointestinal microbiota, thus conferring benefit(s) upon host health” [ |
| 2015 | “A non-digestible compound that, through its metabolization by microorganisms in the gut, modulates the composition and/or activity of the gut microbiota, thus, conferring a beneficial physiological effect on the host” [ |
| 2016 | “A substrate that is selectively utilized by host microorganisms conferring a health benefit” [ |
Fig. 2Requirements for potential prebiotics [100, 101]
Examples of prebiotic formulas available in the market and intended for livestock
| Trade name of preparation (producer) | Prebiotic substances | Destination |
|---|---|---|
| Bacto CS1000 | Polysaccharides, oligosaccharides | Poultry |
| BionatStart | MOS, β-glucans | Calves |
| DOLSORB DN (Dolfos) | MOS, β-glucans | Poultry |
| MetSac MOS (VITTRA) | MOS, β-glucans | Calves, pigs, poultry |
| Mycocyd forte (Herbiline) | β-glucans | Poultry |
| Mycostop (Extra-vit) | MOS, β-glucans | Poultry, pigs |
| PROFEED® (Beghin Meiji) | scFOS | Horses, pigs, poultry, calves |
FOS fructo-oligosacharides, MOS malto-oligosacharides, scFOS short chain fructo-oligosaccharides
Examples of trials regarding the effect of prebiotics on animal health
| Reference | Subjects | Prebiotic | Time | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absorption and utilisation of feed, diarrhoea, body weight gain | ||||
| [ | 240 Broiler chickens | FOS | 49 days | Administration of fructooligosaccharides at the dose of 4 g/kg feed had a positive effect on the mean daily growth of studied animals, and on growth of |
| [ | 320 Turkeys | FOS | 8 weeks | No effect on growth and productivity of experimental animals. However, reduction of the intestinal pH was noted in case of FOS administration at the concentration of 2% |
| [ | 96 Broiler chickens | Fructans from chicory | 6 weeks | An improved body weight gain, feed turnover and reduced serum cholesterol |
| [ | 40 Turkeys | MOS, inulin | 8 weeks | No increased feed consumption or higher body weight of experimental animals were observed. A higher SCFA concentration was found in animals fed with prebiotics, compared to the control |
| [ | 180 Turkeys | MOS | 18 weeks | Improved growth of experimental animals |
| [ | 120 Chickens | Inulin, oligofructose, MOS, short-chain oligosaccharide, TOS | 21 days | No significant body weight gain. The study demonstrated that an excessively high prebiotic dose may have a negative impact on the gastrointestinal system and delay the process of growth of animals |
| Intestinal ecosystem imbalance, pathogenic infections | ||||
| [ | 12 Pigs | TOS | 6 weeks | A significant increase of stool |
| [ | 40 Weaned male pigs | GOS | Mean of 34 days | A significant increase of |
| [ | 98 Broiler chickens | Fructans from chicory | 6 weeks | The supplementation with fructans caused an increase |
| [ | 380 Chickens | Fructans from artichoke | 35 days | Reduced |
| [ | 120 Broiler chickens infected with | IMO | 21 days | A significant reduction of |
| Improved quality of meat, milk, eggs | ||||
| [ | 350,560 Eggs from Ross 308 broiler | DiNovo (DN; laminarin and fucoidan), Bi2tos (BI; non-digestive TOS) | 42 days | No significant differences in the final count of chickens, mortality, breeding density (kg/m3), FCR, European Broiler Index between all experimental groups. The administration of DN and BI resulted in a minor increase (P > 0.05) of the mean BW and a minor improvement (P > 0.05) of FCR in the BI group. Chickens exposed to DN and BI demonstrated a significant increase of BW, carcase weight, weight of the myocardium and weight of the breast, compared to the control group. Summing up, the administration of prebiotics in ovo resulted in an improvement of many parameters significant for the commercial production of poultry |
BW body weight, FCR feed conversion ratio, FOS fructo-oligosaccharides, GOS galacto-oligosaccharides, IMO isomalto-oligosaccharides, MOS manno-oligosaccharides, TOS transgalacto-oligosaccharides
Examples of commercial synbiotic formulas used in nutrition of livestock
| Trade name of the preparation (producer) | Microorganisms | Prebiotic substances | Destination |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biomin®IMBO (ME BIOMIN GmbH) |
| FOS | Poultry, pigs, calves |
| DigestAid™ |
| β-glucan, MOS | Horses |
| PoultryStar® (ME BIOMIN GmbH) |
| Inulin | Poultry |
| Synbiotic poultry (Vetafarm) |
| Inulin | Poultry |
FOS fructo-oligosacharides, MOS mannano-oligosacharides
Examples of trials regarding the effect of synbiotics on animal health
| Reference | Subjects | Composition of synbiotic | Time | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Absorption and utilisation of feed, diarrhoea, body weight gain | ||||
| [ | 320 Turkeys infected with | 14 days (trial 1–3), 18 days (trial 4) | The effect of a synbiotic on improved feed conversion and increased body weight of experimental animals | |
| [ | 720 Broiler chickens | 6 weeks | Improved average daily growth, FCR, reduced incidence of diarrhoea and mortality, compared to animals treated with aureomycin | |
| [ | 600 Broiler chickens | 5 weeks | A significant increase of the average daily body weight gain, carcase ratio and FCR compared to the control | |
| Intestinal ecosystem imbalance, pathogenic infections | ||||
| [ | 33 Conventional healthy sucking piglets | 7 days | Reduced counts of | |
| [ | 150 Pigs during weaning | A probiotic of anaerobic microflora (bacteria/yeast/moulds), MOS, sodium acetate, ammonia citrate | 16 days | Improved digestion of nutrients, reduced emission of harmful gases and prevention of bacterial infections during the weaning period |
| Improved quality of meat, milk, eggs | ||||
| [ | 58 Holsten dairy cows | 1 year | Significant increase in Holstein cow milk production; including total milk, fat, protein and solids-non-fat production | |
FCR feed conversion ratio, FOS fructo-oligosaccharides, MOS mannano-oligosaccharides