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Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Coccidiosis is a parasitic disease in poultry that causes significant economic losses. It is understood that natural or synthetic antioxidants including plant extracts, vitamin E, and selenium have been proved to lessen the gut severity of Eimeria infection in chickens. Sulfur is an...

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Autores principales: Jeon, Yong-Sung, Kim, Yoo-Bhin, Lee, Hyun-Gwan, Park, Jina, Heo, Yun-Ji, Chu, Gyo-Moon, Lee, Kyung-Woo
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9099933/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35565626
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12091200
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author Jeon, Yong-Sung
Kim, Yoo-Bhin
Lee, Hyun-Gwan
Park, Jina
Heo, Yun-Ji
Chu, Gyo-Moon
Lee, Kyung-Woo
author_facet Jeon, Yong-Sung
Kim, Yoo-Bhin
Lee, Hyun-Gwan
Park, Jina
Heo, Yun-Ji
Chu, Gyo-Moon
Lee, Kyung-Woo
author_sort Jeon, Yong-Sung
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Coccidiosis is a parasitic disease in poultry that causes significant economic losses. It is understood that natural or synthetic antioxidants including plant extracts, vitamin E, and selenium have been proved to lessen the gut severity of Eimeria infection in chickens. Sulfur is an essential element and exhibits beneficial activities including parasitic, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory. These functional features of sulfur might play a role in inhibiting the negative effect of chicken coccidiosis and, if proved, sulfur could be used as an anticoccidial agent. We tested dietary sulfur of both organic and inorganic forms with beneficial antioxidant properties in a mild coccidiosis disease broiler chicken model. ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of dietary sulfur from either organic (methyl sulfonyl methane, MSM) or inorganic (sodium sulfate, SS) sources on the growth performance of broiler chickens challenged against a high-dose coccidiosis vaccine. A total of 320 day-old Ross 308 broiler chicks were randomly placed into 32 pens of 10 birds each (keeping 16 pens/control group and 8 pens/treatment group until 21 days post-hatch) and reared for 28 days. The experimental diets were formulated by mixing a corn and soybean meal-based control diet with MSM or SS. At 21 days post-hatch, half (n = 8) of the control and all of the sulfur-added diet-fed (i.e., MSM and SS) groups were challenged with a 30-fold dose of a commercially available Eimeria vaccine (Livacox(®) T coccidiosis vaccine). Unchallenged control chicks (n = 8) were considered as the negative control group. At 21 days (before coccidiosis vaccine challenge), the production parameters and cecal short-chain fatty acids were not affected by dietary treatments. The concentrations of total antioxidant capacity in liver samples were elevated in both the MSM and SS groups compared with the control group (p = 0.001). During 21 to 28 days (i.e., one week post coccidiosis vaccine challenge), challenge tended to lower body weight and feed intake by an average of 5.3% (p = 0.262) and 2.8% (p = 0.504), respectively, but to increase the feed conversion ratio by an average of 2.7% (p = 0.087) compared with the non-challenged control groups. None of dietary sulfur groups affected the body weight gain, feed intake, or feed conversion ratio of vaccine-challenged chickens. Mild Eimeria-specific lesions were noted in duodenum (p = 0.006), jejunum (p = 0.017), and ceca (p = 0.047), but dietary sulfur treatments did not affect the Eimeria-induced gut lesion scores. At 28 days, Eimeria challenge significantly impaired (p = 0.001) the apparent ileal digestibility of crude protein and crude ash compared with the naïve control group. Dietary MSM increased the apparent ileal digestibility of crude ash by 15.5% on average compared with the coccidiosis vaccine control group. We conclude that dietary antioxidant sulfur of organic or inorganic origins at the inclusion level (i.e., 0.7 g sulfur/kg of diet) has a limited effect on the growth performance of chickens challenged with coccidiosis vaccine.
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spelling pubmed-90999332022-05-14 Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens Jeon, Yong-Sung Kim, Yoo-Bhin Lee, Hyun-Gwan Park, Jina Heo, Yun-Ji Chu, Gyo-Moon Lee, Kyung-Woo Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Coccidiosis is a parasitic disease in poultry that causes significant economic losses. It is understood that natural or synthetic antioxidants including plant extracts, vitamin E, and selenium have been proved to lessen the gut severity of Eimeria infection in chickens. Sulfur is an essential element and exhibits beneficial activities including parasitic, antioxidant, and anti-inflammatory. These functional features of sulfur might play a role in inhibiting the negative effect of chicken coccidiosis and, if proved, sulfur could be used as an anticoccidial agent. We tested dietary sulfur of both organic and inorganic forms with beneficial antioxidant properties in a mild coccidiosis disease broiler chicken model. ABSTRACT: The objective of this study was to evaluate the effects of dietary sulfur from either organic (methyl sulfonyl methane, MSM) or inorganic (sodium sulfate, SS) sources on the growth performance of broiler chickens challenged against a high-dose coccidiosis vaccine. A total of 320 day-old Ross 308 broiler chicks were randomly placed into 32 pens of 10 birds each (keeping 16 pens/control group and 8 pens/treatment group until 21 days post-hatch) and reared for 28 days. The experimental diets were formulated by mixing a corn and soybean meal-based control diet with MSM or SS. At 21 days post-hatch, half (n = 8) of the control and all of the sulfur-added diet-fed (i.e., MSM and SS) groups were challenged with a 30-fold dose of a commercially available Eimeria vaccine (Livacox(®) T coccidiosis vaccine). Unchallenged control chicks (n = 8) were considered as the negative control group. At 21 days (before coccidiosis vaccine challenge), the production parameters and cecal short-chain fatty acids were not affected by dietary treatments. The concentrations of total antioxidant capacity in liver samples were elevated in both the MSM and SS groups compared with the control group (p = 0.001). During 21 to 28 days (i.e., one week post coccidiosis vaccine challenge), challenge tended to lower body weight and feed intake by an average of 5.3% (p = 0.262) and 2.8% (p = 0.504), respectively, but to increase the feed conversion ratio by an average of 2.7% (p = 0.087) compared with the non-challenged control groups. None of dietary sulfur groups affected the body weight gain, feed intake, or feed conversion ratio of vaccine-challenged chickens. Mild Eimeria-specific lesions were noted in duodenum (p = 0.006), jejunum (p = 0.017), and ceca (p = 0.047), but dietary sulfur treatments did not affect the Eimeria-induced gut lesion scores. At 28 days, Eimeria challenge significantly impaired (p = 0.001) the apparent ileal digestibility of crude protein and crude ash compared with the naïve control group. Dietary MSM increased the apparent ileal digestibility of crude ash by 15.5% on average compared with the coccidiosis vaccine control group. We conclude that dietary antioxidant sulfur of organic or inorganic origins at the inclusion level (i.e., 0.7 g sulfur/kg of diet) has a limited effect on the growth performance of chickens challenged with coccidiosis vaccine. MDPI 2022-05-06 /pmc/articles/PMC9099933/ /pubmed/35565626 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12091200 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Jeon, Yong-Sung
Kim, Yoo-Bhin
Lee, Hyun-Gwan
Park, Jina
Heo, Yun-Ji
Chu, Gyo-Moon
Lee, Kyung-Woo
Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens
title Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens
title_full Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens
title_fullStr Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens
title_full_unstemmed Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens
title_short Effect of Dietary Organic and Inorganic Sulfur on the Performance of Coccidiosis Vaccine Challenged Broiler Chickens
title_sort effect of dietary organic and inorganic sulfur on the performance of coccidiosis vaccine challenged broiler chickens
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9099933/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35565626
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani12091200
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