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Beneficial roles of probiotics on the modulation of gut microbiota and immune response in pigs

Cited 87 time in Web of Science Cited 98 time in Scopus
Authors

Shin, Donghyun; Chang, Sung Yong; Bogere, Paul; Won, KyeongHye; Choi, Jae-Young; Choi, Yeon-Jae; Lee, Hak Kyo; Hur, Jin; Park, Byung-Yong; Kim, Younghoon; Heo, Jaeyoung

Issue Date
2019-08
Publisher
Public Library of Science
Citation
PLoS ONE, Vol.14 No.8, p. e0220843
Abstract
The importance of probiotics in swine production is widely acknowledged as crucial. However, gaps still remain in the exact roles played by probiotics in modulation of gut microbiota and immune response. This study determined the roles of probiotic Lactobacillus plantarum strain JDFM LP11 in gut microbiota modulation and immune response in weaned piglets. L. plantarum JDFM LP11 increased the population of lactic acid bacteria in feces and enhanced the development of villi in the small intestine. Metagenome analysis showed that microbial diversity and richness (Simpson, Shannon, ACE, Chao1) and the relative abundance of the Firmicutes were higher in weaned piglets fed probiotics. Five bacterial families were different in the relative abundance, especially; Prevotellaceae occupied the largest part of microbial community showed the most difference between two groups. Transcriptome analysis identified 25 differentially expressed genes using RNA-sequencing data of the ileum. Further gene ontology and immune DB analysis determined 8 genes associated with innate defense response and cytokine production. BPI, RSAD2, SLPI, LUM, OLFM4, DMBT1 and C6 genes were down-regulated by probiotic supplementation except PLA2G2A. PICRUSt analysis predicting functional profiling of microbial communities indicated branched amino acid biosynthesis and butyrate metabolism promoting gut development and health were increased by probiotics. Altogether, our data suggest that L. plantarum JDFM LP11 increases the diversity and richness in the microbial community, and attenuates the ileal immune gene expression towards gut inflammation, promoting intestinal development in weaned piglets.
ISSN
1932-6203
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/183985
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0220843
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