# Microencapsulated medium-chain fatty acids as an antibiotic alternative improve intestinal immunity and microbiota composition in weaned piglets

**Authors:** Gang Zhang, Yifan Chen, Jingyi Huang, Jiashi Lang, Mingzhu Shang, Lei Shao, Zhiqiang Sun, Jinbiao Zhao

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1731815 · 2026-01-09

## TL;DR

This study shows that adding microencapsulated medium-chain fatty acids to piglet diets improves their gut health and immunity, offering a potential alternative to antibiotics.

## Contribution

The study introduces microencapsulated medium-chain fatty acids as an effective antibiotic alternative for improving gut immunity and microbiota in weaned piglets.

## Key findings

- MCFA supplementation increased feed intake and reduced diarrhea in piglets.
- MCFA improved antioxidant capacity and reduced pro-inflammatory cytokines in the gut.
- MCFA enriched beneficial gut bacteria like Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group and Roseburia.

## Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate effects of microencapsulated medium-chain fatty acids (MCFA) on growth performance, antioxidant capacity, immune response, and gut microbiota in weaned piglets.

A total of 120 weaned piglets (Initial BW 6.38 ± 1.03 kg) were randomly assigned to one of three dietary treatments for a 42-day trial: a corn-soybean meal basal diet (CON), a diet supplemented with 150 mg/kg colistin sulfate (AGP), or a diet supplemented with 0.15% microencapsulated MCFA (MOA), with 5 replicates of 8 piglets per treatment.

During the overall period, the MOA group exhibited a higher average daily feed intake than both the CON and AGP groups (p < 0.05). Dietary MCFA supplementation significantly reduced (p < 0.05) diarrhea incidence in the first 2 weeks compared with the AGP group. On day 42, MCFA enhanced serum total antioxidant capacity compared with the AGP group and significantly lowered (p < 0.05) pro-inflammatory cytokines in the jejunum and colon compared with the CON group. On d 14, MCFA increased (p < 0.05) jejunal butyrate, lactate and jejunal and colonic total short chain fatty acids (SCFA) concentrations. Microbiota analysis revealed that MCFA modulated both jejunal and colonic communities, significantly enriching beneficial bacteria in the colon, such as Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group and Roseburia.

Dietary supplementation with 0.15% microencapsulated MCFA promoted feed intake, optimized intestinal microbiota composition and metabolism, and alleviated intestinal inflammation in weaned piglets.

## Linked entities

- **Chemicals:** colistin sulfate (PubChem CID 73090), butyrate (PubChem CID 104775), lactate (PubChem CID 61503)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** inflammatory (MESH:D007249), diarrhea (MESH:D003967)
- **Chemicals:** SCFA (MESH:D005232), lactate (MESH:D019344), MCFA (-), butyrate (MESH:D002087)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12827742/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12827742