Dietary glutamine supplementation improves growth performance, intestinal morphology, and immunity function associated with cecal microbiota alterations in broilers
Xuelan Liu, Shuhang Yin, Chunyan Fu, Xia Li, Peipei Yan, Heng Zhang, Yan Shang, Tianhong Shi, Qingtao Gao

TL;DR
Adding glutamine to broiler diets improves their growth, gut health, and immunity by changing gut bacteria.
Contribution
This study shows that 4-6 g/kg dietary glutamine optimally enhances broiler growth and immunity through cecal microbiota modulation.
Findings
Glutamine supplementation at 4-6 g/kg improved average daily gain, final body weight, and feed conversion ratio in broilers.
Glutamine increased serum IgA, IgG, and IgM levels, and enhanced intestinal morphology and cecal microbiota diversity.
Supplementation reduced pathogenic bacteria and enriched beneficial genera like Ruminococcaceae_UCG-014 and Butyricimonas.
Abstract
Broilers face challenges in improving intestinal health and growth performance. Glutamine (Gln), a functional amino acid, exerts beneficial effects in promoting intestinal development and immunity. This study investigated the effects of graded levels of dietary Gln supplementation on the growth performance, intestinal morphology, immune indices, and cecal microbiota of broilers. Three hundred one-day-old Arbor Acres broilers (51.67±1.42 g) were assigned to five groups in a completely random design, with six replicates each group and 10 broilers in each replicate. The control group was fed the basal diet (Con), while the experimental groups were fed the basal diet containing 4 g/kg (Gln1), 6 g/kg (Gln2), 8 g/kg (Gln3), and 10 g/kg Gln (Gln4), respectively. The results showed that dietary Gln supplementation had quadratic effect on ADG, F/G, and final BW of broilers (P < 0.01), with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAnimal Nutrition and Physiology · Rabbits: Nutrition, Reproduction, Health · Gut microbiota and health
