Diet-dependent microbiota and diet-independent immunometabolic responses to probiotic supplementation in broiler chickens
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Probiotics are widely used in food animal production to support gut health and immune function, but the indicators of probiotic efficacy and the conditions under which they translate to host benefit remain unclear. Microbiota composition is the most accessible data supporting probiotic effects, yet whether compositional change reliably predicts host outcomes is not well understood. We investigated this question in broiler chickens fed two nutritionally similar basal diets, with or without a commercial probiotic. Microbiota composition was profiled across 6 gastrointestinal regions using 16S rRNA sequencing. To assess systemic functional effects, an in vitro assay building on prior observations of elevated circulating immune cell ATP in probiotic-fed animals was developed. In this assay, serum from each treatment group was applied to a chicken T-lymphocyte cell line before ATP quantitation. Basal diet was the primary driver of microbial community structure, with probiotic-induced compositional shifts observed predominantly in one diet context but minimally in the other. Despite this difference, serum from probiotic-supplemented animals increased T-lymphocyte ATP production across both diets, supporting prior findings and revealing a systemic immunometabolic response independent of broad microbiota restructuring. Functional predictions revealed enrichment of pathways related to mevalonate and carbohydrate metabolism in probiotic-supplemented birds within the more responsive diet context, driven largely by Lactobacillaceae family taxa. These findings demonstrate that basal diet modulates the detectability and nature of probiotic effects on the microbiota, but not the physiological host response. This disconnect has implications for how probiotic efficacy is evaluated and for microbiome targeted interventions across species.
Importance
Probiotics are used widely in food animal production to support gut health and immune function, yet predicting which probiotic preparations will produce meaningful effects remains a challenge. Microbiota composition, profiled by 16S rRNA sequencing, is the most accessible measure of probiotic activity, but it captures only one aspect of the host-microbe dynamic. These data demonstrate that probiotic-induced compositional changes vary substantially between basal diets, while the host immunometabolic response is consistent across diets, demonstrating that compositional readouts alone cannot reliably predict host outcomes. The findings have practical implications for how probiotic efficacy is evaluated and inform the broader effort to design microbiome targeted interventions across both veterinary and human contexts.