Combination of bacteriophage–probiotics alleviates intestinal barrier dysfunction by regulating gut microbiome in a chick model of multidrug-resistant Salmonella infection
Youbin Choi, Anna Kang, Eunsol Seo, Daniel Junpyo Lee, Junha Park, Yeonsoo Kim, Keesun Yu, Cheol‑Heui Yun, Ki Beom Jang, Woo Kyun Kim, Kwanseob Shim, Darae Kang, Younghoon Kim

TL;DR
A combination of bacteriophages and a probiotic improved gut health and reduced Salmonella infection in chicks, offering a potential alternative to antibiotics.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel phage–probiotic combination therapy that enhances Salmonella clearance and intestinal health in poultry.
Findings
Co-administration of phages and probiotics reduced Salmonella colonization and improved body-weight gain in infected chicks.
The treatment improved intestinal barrier function by increasing tight-junction gene expression and reducing inflammation.
The gut microbiota showed a more balanced composition with increased beneficial bacteria like Lactobacillus and Blautia.
Abstract
The rapid emergence of multidrug-resistant Salmonella in poultry demands alternative control strategies beyond conventional antibiotics. In this study, we evaluated a combination of lytic Salmonella-infecting bacteriophages (SLAM_phiST45 and SLAM_phiST56) and a probiotic bacterium Limosilactobacillus reuteri (SLAM_LAR11) in a chick model challenged with Salmonella enterica serovar Typhimurium infection. Co-administration with two-phage cocktail and a probiotic showed markedly reduced Salmonella colonization in the gut and systemic organs of chicks, comparable to the effect of phage-only treatment. In contrast with phage-only treatment, the combined therapy significantly improved the rate of body-weight change from the day of infection to necropsy (P < 0.0001) and alleviated infection-associated splenomegaly (P = 0.028) and hepatomegaly (P = 0.011). In the ileum, the villus…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBacteriophages and microbial interactions · Salmonella and Campylobacter epidemiology · Cancer Research and Treatments
