Poultry digestive microflora biodiversity as indicated by denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis

Abstract
Populations of digestive microflora in chickens change with age and are affected by diet, stressors, and performance enhancers. Culturing techniques used to profile a bacterial community inadvertently select for some organisms while excluding others. Several molecular-based techniques have been used to profile mixed microbial populations on the basis of DNA extracted from the entire community. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis was used in the present study to examine PCR-amplified fragments (amplicons) of a 16S ribosomal DNA variable region from predominant digestive bacteria. The objective of the study was to examine changes in digestive microbial communities of developing Leghorn chicks and molted Leghorn hens. Dendrograms of amplicon patterns indicated approximately 51% similarity between cecal bacteria composition in Leghorn chicks less than 20 d old and chicks greater than 20 d old. Cecal communities in Leghorn chicks given a competitive exclusion culture exhibited 21% correlation at all ages with those in control chicks. Nonmolted and molted hens had 40% similarity between cecal communities, whereas diets with low calcium (0.8% wt/wt) and excess zinc (2,800 mg/kg) lessened population differences (90% similarity). Results indicated the potential usefulness of the molecular-based denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis to monitor changes in digestive bacterial communities in chickens.