1. Efficacy of bacteriophage therapy on horizontal transmission of Salmonella gallinarum on commercial layer chickens.
- Author
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Lim TH, Lee DH, Lee YN, Park JK, Youn HN, Kim MS, Lee HJ, Yang SY, Cho YW, Lee JB, Park SY, Choi IS, and Song CS
- Subjects
- Animal Feed, Animals, Diet veterinary, Female, Poultry Diseases microbiology, Poultry Diseases mortality, Salmonella Infections, Animal microbiology, Salmonella Infections, Animal mortality, Chickens, Poultry Diseases prevention & control, Poultry Diseases therapy, Salmonella virology, Salmonella Infections, Animal prevention & control, Salmonella Infections, Animal therapy, Salmonella Phages physiology
- Abstract
A Salmonella Gallinarum (SG)-specific bacteriophage isolated from sewage effluent was used to prevent horizontal transmission of SG in commercial layer chickens. Six-week-old chickens, each challenged with 5 x 10(8) colony-forming units of SG, cohabited with contact chickens treated with 10(6) plaque-forming units/kg of bacteriophage, prepared in feed additives, for 7 days before, and 21 days after challenge with SG. Mortality was observed for 3 wk after challenge and SG was periodically reisolated from the liver, spleen, and cecum of chickens. SG re-isolation from organs was decreased and a significant (P < 0.05) reduction in mortality was observed in contact chickens treated with the bacteriophage, as compared to untreated contact chickens, indicating that bacteriophage administration in feed additives significantly prevented the horizontal transmission of SG. These results provide important insights into prevention and control strategies against SG infection and suggest that the use of bacteriophages may be a novel, safe, and effectively plausible alternative to antibiotics for the prevention of SG infection in poultry.
- Published
- 2011
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