The gut microbiota is crucial for immune development and overall health in chickens. In commercial production, birds routinely receive multiple vaccines during early life. While individual vaccines are known to affect microbial composition, the impact of complex, multi-vaccine programs, as used in the poultry industry, is not well understood. This longitudinal study examined the impact of multiple live and inactivated vaccines, given at commercially relevant times from an early age, on gut microbial diversity and composition in layer chickens. We characterised microbiota profiles using 16S rRNA gene sequencing at pre- and post-vaccination timepoints across different vaccine groups. Overall, microbial diversity remained stable across most vaccines, indicating strong resilience of the gut microbiota to repeated immunological interventions. Differential abundance analyses identified changes in selected bacterial taxa following vaccination, with responses varying among vaccine groups. Notably, these changes were not sustained, as the gut microbial community returned to a stable state after the vaccination schedule. These findings underscore the robustness of the chicken gut ecosystem and lay a foundation for future research into microbiome-vaccine interactions and their implications for poultry health, immunity, and production efficiency.
Ahmad, A. A., Hogan, K. G., Glendinning, L.
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