Relationships between cecum, ileum and litter bacterial microbiomes in a commercial turkey flock, and the impact of penicillin treatment on early bacterial community establishment

Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Statistics
View Statistics

Collection period

2012-06

Date completed

2014

Date updated

Time period coverage

Geographic coverage

Willmar, MN, USA

Source information

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Title

Relationships between cecum, ileum and litter bacterial microbiomes in a commercial turkey flock, and the impact of penicillin treatment on early bacterial community establishment

Published Date

2015-10-19

Group

Author Contact

Johnson, Timothy
joh04207@umn.edu

Type

Dataset
Genomics Data
Experimental Data

Abstract

Gut health is paramount for commercial poultry production, and methods to assess gut health are critically needed to better understand how the avian gastrointestinal tract matures over time. One important aspect of gut health is the totality of bacterial populations inhabiting different sites of the avian gastrointestinal tract, and associations of these populations with the poultry farm environment, since these bacteria are thought to drive metabolism and prime the host immune system. In this study, a single flock of commercial turkeys was followed over the course of twelve weeks to examine bacterial microbiome inhabiting the ceca, ileum, and corresponding poultry litter. Furthermore, the effects of low-dose, growth-promoting penicillin treatment (50 g/ton) in feed on the ileum bacterial microbiome were also examined during the early brood period. The cecum and ileum bacterial communities of birds shifted independently but in parallel to one another over time, with distinct bacterial populations harboring each site. Corresponding poultry litter more closely represented the ileal bacterial populations than cecal bacterial populations, and also changed parallel to ileum bacterial populations over time. Penicillin applied at low doses in feed significantly enhanced early weight gain in commercial poults, and this correlated with predictable shifts in the ileum bacterial populations in control versus treatment groups. Overall, this study demonstrates the dynamic shifts in the turkey gastrointestinal microbiome during development, the correlations between bacterial populations in the gastrointestinal tract and the litter environment, and the impact of low-dose penicillin on the modulation of bacterial communities in the ileum. Alternatives to low-dose antibiotics would benefit by mimicking these effects in the gut, among others.

Description

16S amplicon data for the V1 hypervariable region from a study of growth promoting antibiotics in commercial turkeys. Included are trimmed and quality filtered data, OTU biom files, and rep fasta files.

Referenced by

Related to

Replaces

Replaced by

Publisher

Funding information

item.page.sponsorshipfunderid

item.page.sponsorshipfundingagency

item.page.sponsorshipgrant

Previously Published Citation

Other identifiers

Suggested citation

Danzeisen, Jessica; Clayton, Jonathan; Huang, Hu; Knights, Dan; McComb, Brian; Hayer, Shivdeep; Johnson, Timothy. (2015). Relationships between cecum, ileum and litter bacterial microbiomes in a commercial turkey flock, and the impact of penicillin treatment on early bacterial community establishment. Retrieved from the Data Repository for the University of Minnesota (DRUM), http://dx.doi.org/10.13020/D67G6P.
View/Download file
File View/OpenDescriptionSize
sample_type_study_sequence_data.zipSequence data for temporal sample type study (trial #1)67.19 MB
otu_table_no_less_than_25.biomOTU biom table for temporal sample type study (trial #1)493.83 KB
Combined3_rep_set.fastaRepresentative fasta sequences for temporal sample type study (trial #1)6.19 MB
penicillin_study_sequence_files.zipSequence data for penicillin study (trial #2)4 MB
penall_rep_set.fastaRepresentative fasta sequences for penicillin study (trial #2)221.49 KB
otu_table.biomOTU biom table for penicillin study (trial #2)188.8 KB
Samples_pen_trial.xlsxSample IDs (Trial #1 and Trial #2)43.98 KB
readme.txtDescription of data4.46 KB

Content distributed via the University Digital Conservancy may be subject to additional license and use restrictions applied by the depositor. By using these files, users agree to the Terms of Use. Materials in the UDC may contain content that is disturbing and/or harmful. For more information, please see our statement on harmful content in digital repositories.