# Application of Autochthonous Biofilm-Forming Enterococcus hirae Kr8 Strain in Relation with Enterocin M in Broiler Rabbits and Their Effect on the Rabbit Meat Quality: Risk or Protection?

**Authors:** Monika Pogány Simonová, Ľubica Chrastinová, Eva Bino, Anna Kandričáková, Zuzana Formelová, Andrea Lauková

PMC · DOI: 10.1007/s12602-023-10097-z · 2023-06-06

## TL;DR

This study tests if a specific strain of Enterococcus hirae and an enterocin can improve rabbit meat quality and protect against gastrointestinal issues.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is evaluating the protective and beneficial effects of an autochthonous E. hirae strain and Enterocin M on rabbit meat quality and health.

## Key findings

- The Kr8+ strain did not harm rabbits and improved meat quality and weight gains.
- Enterocin M enhanced meat properties and synergized with Kr8+ to boost nutritional quality.
- No adverse effects were observed from the tested additives.

## Abstract

Around weaning, rabbits are sensitive to gastrointestinal diseases, mostly of bacterial origin, including enterococci (Enterococcus hirae), clostridia, and coliforms. Preventive use of postbiotics—enterocins—as feed additives can reduce this problem. Therefore, simulation of spoilage/pathogenic environment applying the autochthonous, biofilm-forming E. hirae Kr8+ strain in rabbits and its influence on rabbit meat quality as well as the protective effect of Ent M on rabbit meat properties and quality in infected animals was tested. Ninety-six rabbits aged 35 days, both sexes, meat line M91 breed were divided into one control (CG) and three experimental (EG1, EG2, and EG3) groups. The rabbits in CG received standard diet, without any additives, rabbits in EG1 received 108 CFU/mL of Kr8+ strain (at a dose of 500 μL/animal/day), to rabbits in EG2 the Ent M (50 μL/animal/day), and in EG3, combination of the Kr8+ and Ent M was applied in their drinking water during 21 days. The experiment lasted 42 days. The Kr8+ strain did not attack the gastrointestinal tract and have any adverse effect on the meat quality of rabbits. Moreover, improved weight gains, carcass parameters, and higher essential fatty acid (EAA) and amino acid (EAA) content of rabbit meat point rather to its possible beneficial potential in rabbit nutrition. Administration of Ent M improved most of the tested parameters: animal weight and meat physicochemical and nutritional properties, with a focus on EFA and EAA. During combination of both additives, their synergistic impact was noted, improving the nutritional quality, mostly the EAA content of rabbit meat.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Enterococcus hirae (taxon 1354)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** gastrointestinal diseases (MESH:D005767)
- **Species:** Enterococcus hirae (species) [taxon 1354], Oryctolagus cuniculus (domestic rabbit, species) [taxon 9986]

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11126440