Probiotics, belonging to the functional group of gut flora stabilisers
within

the category of zootechnical feed additives (according to
the Regulation EC No 1831/2003) is a fast growing market. In 2004, the global
market value of probiotics was €32 million, with a forecasted annual growth of
approximately 3%. However, due to the ban of antimicrobial feed additives, the
probiotic market in Western Europe showed an annual growth of more than 7%. In
2006, Western Europe produced around 296 tons of probiotics, with a value of
€15.5 million. With 1012 CFU (equivalent to about 100g) usually added to a ton
of mixed feed, approximately 3 million tons of feed containing probiotics was
produced last year.
Authorised probiotics for pigsOf the 18 authorised
probiotics in the EU, 12 are authorised for pig feed (10 are approved for
piglets, 6 for sows and 5 for fattening pigs). The micro-organisms for pig feed
are of various origins (
Table 1). Most

preparations contain defined strains of bacteria and only
three of them contain yeasts. Bacillus strains are spore forming bacteria and
are applied as spore preparations while enterococci and pediococci do not form
spores and are applied as desiccated vegetative ells. Therefore, Bacillus
probiotics are much more stable during feed processing (including pelleting and
during in-feed storage). We have found that the recovery of B. cereus var. toyoi
was 95% after pelleting (conditioner 80°C, dye 87°C), while the recovery of
viable counts of an
E. faecium strain decreased with increasing
treatment temperature (
Figure 1). However, the stability of vegetative
cells can be improved by various techniques (soaking on globuli, coating).
Although viability losses can be compensated by initial overdosing during feed
production if the rate of inactivation is known, storage of the complete feed is
still a matter of concern. Bacterial spores, on the other hand, are remarkably
stable during storage in pelleted feed (
Figure 2). Yeasts are the most
sensitive to heat treatment. Probably influenced by their stability
characteristics, sales volume of used probiotic organisms in pig feeding can be
categorised as follows: Bacillus spore probiotics > Enterococcus strains
(lactic acid bacteria) > yeast probiotics (viable cells).


Effect on bacterial communities
Considering the fact
that bacterial population outnumber the ingested probiotic bacterium by a factor
of 10-1000 in the stomach/small intestine and more than 104 in the hind gut, one
may doubt that any effect could occur. However, there are a number of studies on
the influence of probiotics in piglets that show significant modifications of
bacterial composition and hence bacterial activity, as well as influences on
intestinal immunology, epithelial physiology and anatomy. Bacillus cereus and
Enterococcus faecium, two commonly used probiotics in pig nutrition, are of
completely different origin. Both species are able to modify bacterial
population in young animals, yet their modes of action may be completely
different. In our recent realtime-PCR study (Vahjen et al., 2006), we found that
the ratio of probiotic E. faecium cells to total Enterococcus spp.
cells in the intestine of suckling and weaned piglets was only in the range of
about 0.1 - 12% (Figure 3) and even less for total bacterial cells in
the intestine. However, the same study showed that E. faecalis - not
E. faecium - cell numbers (excluding the probiotic strain) were
significantly reduced due to the presence of the probiotic E. faecium.
Thus, one probiotic mode of action of this strain may be the growth inhibition
of similar species, which may trigger further changes of the bacterial
composition. Similar studies on Bacillus spp. probiotics are not
available; however, classical culturing studies show decreased growth of
enterobacteria and enterococci, but not for total lactic acid bacteria or other
main bacterial groups. As bacilli are alien to the intestine, the local
immune system of the piglet will treat probiotic bacilli as a
potentially pathogenic threat. Indeed, the contact of suckling piglets with a
Bacillus cereus probiotic via mother faeces led to an upregulation of
key small intestinal immune parameters.
Interestingly, the same group found a reduced immune response in suckling
piglets which had contact with E. faecium probiotic via
mother faeces (Scharek et al., 2005). This led to the assumption that the E.
faecium probiotic itself or the modified bacterial population in mother faeces
(mother sows received the probiotic in feed) were less active in triggering an
immune response in the piglet. Thus, different modes of action regarding the
modification of intestinal bacterial communities can be expected in different
probiotic bacteria.
Effects on pig performance
A summary of 49
peer-reviewed publications on probiotics in pigs between 1973 and 2007, which
covered 11 different bacterial species in several different strains and in
various preparations, yield a very heterogeneous picture regarding piglet
performance and post-weaning diarrhoea.
Concentrating on weaned piglets, for which the reviewed literature is
reasonably comparable, the relative change (probiotic vs. control group) in
average daily gain (ADG) of post-weaning piglets ranged from -8% to +24% (median
+5.5%), but compromised just 14 trials (35%) with significant positive effects
out of 40 analysed trials.
The relative change in feed conversion ratio (FCR) in these trials ranged
from -12.5 to +5%, had a median change of 0% and was significantly improved
compared to the control group in only 10 trials.
Our own studies, which used Enterococcus faecium NCIMB 10415 and
Bacillus cereus var. toyoi in feed for sows during gestation/lactation
and for piglets pre-/ postweaning, led to an 11% numerical increase in ADG
(P>0.05) and a highly significant improvement of about 9% for FCR (P<0.01)
in the case of the B. cereus strain (Taras et al., 2005). E. faecium
NCIMB 10415 had no significant affect on overall performance of weaned
piglets in any of three supplementation initiation variants; although the
overall FCR was improved numerically by about 1%.
Correlation of the ADG in control groups with the relative ADG differences
observed in the respective probiotic groups has led to the impression that a
significant improvement of ADG by probiotics might become more and more unlikely
with increasing ADG in the control group (Figure 4). In addition, it
might be suggested that with increasing ADG in the control group, the magnitude
of the probiotic effect decreases. This may indicate that probiotics work most
efficient in young piglets early on in the development of microbial communities
in the gut. Immunological parameters that exhibited the largest difference to
control samples in 14 day old probiotic piglets measured in one of our own trial
might support this hypothesis (Scharek et al., 2005).

Effects on post weaning diarrhoea
Of the 49 reviewed
publications, 19 trials in pre-/postweaning piglets considered diarrhoea
incidence and 74% of those trials reported a reduction in diarrhoea incidence.
However, a large range from a 78% increase in the number of affected piglets to
total elimination of diarrhoea in the probiotic group (median 49% reduction) can
be observed, although significant differences were always in favour of the
probiotic group (11 trials). Evaluation of the effect of different starting
points of probiotic application with E. faecium NCIMB 10415 in our own trials
demonstrated that the relative magnitude of the reduction in diarrhoea was
frequency largely independent of dietary probiotic concentration or starting
time of supplementation (Figure 5).

Future developments and potential
Despite the apparent
inconsistencies in conclusions from published research, investigations are
undertaken to genetically engineer probiotics with improved abilities (acid
stability, epithelial adhesion and metabolite profile). The European Union has
not yet implemented regulations for the risk assessment of genetically modified
microorganisms (GMO) in animal nutrition.
Especially when GMOs are used to deliver drugs or vaccines, they could not
be regulated as feed additives but have to be treated as therapeutic agents. For
the development of probiotics with an improved potential, such sophisticated
genetic tools might be unnecessary.
Several work groups isolate novel bacteria from the habitat of interest as
done with the isolation of Bifidobacterium spp. from pigs to test their
probiotic potential. The use of Bifidobacterium spp. and Lactobacillus
spp. as probiotics in pigs might be a further future development if
technological solutions (e.g. drinking water application or non-thermal feed
processing) can be developed, which overcome their instability in common feed
processing techniques.
This article can be found in Feed Mix magazine Vol. 15 nr. 1