Abstract
Although Enterococcus faecium is used as a probiotic feed supplement in animal production, feeding of the bacterium to piglets resulted in a more severe infection with Salmonella Typhimurium DT104 during a challenge experiment. To enlighten the mode of action by which E. faecium affected the piglets’ health, we investigated the influence of the probiotic bacterium on the development of intestinal and circulating immune cells during a challenge experiment with S.Typhimurium DT104. To minimise varying impacts of the maternal immunity on the course of infection, only piglets were implemented that descended from Salmonella-free sows. In addition, the potency of purified blood and intraepithelial immune cells to control the growth of Salmonella was tested in vitro. In animals treated with E. faecium, a reduction of intraepithelial CD8αβ T cells, reduced circulating CD8αβ T cells and a less efficient control of intracellular Salmonella growth, mediated by peripheral blood mononuclear cells, were observed.
Acknowledgements
The authors thank David Taras and the personnel of the Institute of Animal Nutrition, Free University of Berlin, for their assistance in carrying out the animal infection studies. Furthermore, they thank K.D. Weyrauch and B. Drewes for the histological investigations. This study was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG), Grant FOR 438 and Grant SFB 852.