Researchers at the University of California, Davis have developed a method to prevent and treat enteric pathogenic bacterial infections in nursing mammals by reducing milk glycan monomers in the gut through targeted probiotic administration.
This technology addresses the prevention and treatment of enteric infections in nursing non-human mammals by limiting the availability of milk glycans and milk glycan degradation products, such as sialic acid, which serve as critical carbon sources for pathogenic bacteria like Enterobacteriaceae and Clostridiaceae. The method employs administration of specific probiotic microorganisms, notably Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium species, which consume these glycans or their monomers, thereby reducing pathogen colonization and associated diseases such as piglet scour or diarrhea. The approach also includes the possible use of prebiotics to promote colonization of these beneficial microbes in the neonate gut, offering a targeted, antibiotic-free strategy to control harmful pathogens.
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bifidobacterium, enterobacteriaceae, lactobacillus, milk glycans, neonate gut, pathogen reduction, piglet diarrhea, probiotics, sialic acid, veterinary therapeutics