Novel strategies to improve chicken performance and welfare by unveiling host-microbiota interactions through hologenomics

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  • Núria Tous
  • Sofia Marcos
  • Farshad Goodarzi Boroojeni
  • Ana Pérez de Rozas
  • Jürgen Zentek
  • Andone Estonba
  • Dorthe Sandvang
  • Gilbert, Tom
  • Enric Esteve-Garcia
  • Robert Finn
  • Alberdi Estibaritz, Antton
  • Joan Tarradas

Fast optimisation of farming practices is essential to meet environmental sustainability challenges. Hologenomics, the joint study of the genomic features of animals and the microbial communities associated with them, opens new avenues to obtain in-depth knowledge on how host-microbiota interactions affect animal performance and welfare, and in doing so, improve the quality and sustainability of animal production. Here, we introduce the animal trials conducted with broiler chickens in the H2020 project HoloFood, and our strategy to implement hologenomic analyses in light of the initial results, which despite yielding negligible effects of tested feed additives, provide relevant information to understand how host genomic features, microbiota development dynamics and host-microbiota interactions shape animal welfare and performance. We report the most relevant results, propose hypotheses to explain the observed patterns, and outline how these questions will be addressed through the generation and analysis of animal-microbiota multi-omic data during the HoloFood project.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummer884925
TidsskriftFrontiers in Physiology
Vol/bind13
Antal sider14
ISSN1664-042X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2022

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
We would like to thank the researchers, farm workers and volunteers who participated in the design, maintenance and execution of the animal trials, as well as in the collection and processing of the samples. MTPG acknowledges the Danish National Research Foundation through the grant DNRF143 “A Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics”.

Funding Information:
This research was funded by the European Union’s Horizon Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement No. 817729 (HoloFood, Holistic solution to improve animal food production through deconstructing the biomolecular interactions between feed, gut microorganisms and animals in relation to performance parameters).

Publisher Copyright:
Copyright © 2022 Tous, Marcos, Goodarzi Boroojeni, Pérez de Rozas, Zentek, Estonba, Sandvang, Gilbert, Esteve-Garcia, Finn, Alberdi and Tarradas.

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