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The Impact of Deoxynivalenol on Pigeon Health: Occurrence in Feed, Toxicokinetics and Interaction with Salmonellosis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Seed-based diets for racing pigeons often contain mycotoxins like deoxynivalenol (DON), which can negatively impact their intestinal health and immune response.
  • DON was found in 50% of the racing pigeon feed samples analyzed, with concentrations ranging from 177 to 1,466 μg/kg.
  • Feeding pigeons contaminated diets led to a higher rate of Salmonella shedding, indicating that DON may facilitate the spread of this bacterium, even though it did not significantly affect disease symptoms or severity.

Article Abstract

Seed-based pigeon diets could be expected to result in exposure of pigeons to mycotoxins such as deoxynivalenol (DON). Ingestion of low to moderate contamination levels of DON may impair intestinal health, immune function and/or pathogen fitness, resulting in altered host-pathogen interactions and thus different outcome of infections. Here we demonstrate that DON was one of the most frequently detected mycotoxins in seed-based racing pigeons feed, contaminating 5 out of 10 samples (range 177-1,466 μg/kg). Subsequently, a toxicokinetic analysis revealed a low absolute oral bioavailability (F) of DON in pigeons (30.4%), which is comparable to other avian species. Furthermore, semi-quantitative analysis using high-resolution mass spectrometry revealed that DON-3α-sulphate is the major metabolite of DON in pigeons after intravenous as well as oral administration. Following ingestion of DON contaminated feed, the intestinal epithelial cells are exposed to significant DON concentrations which eventually may affect intestinal translocation and colonization of bacteria. Feeding pigeons a DON contaminated diet resulted in an increased percentage of pigeons shedding Salmonella compared to birds fed control diet, 87 ± 17% versus 74 ± 13%, respectively. However, no impact of DON was observed on the Salmonella induced disease signs, organ lesions, faecal and organ Salmonella counts. The presented risk assessment indicates that pigeons are frequently exposed to mycotoxins such as DON, which can affect the outcome of a Salmonella infection. The increasing number of pigeons shedding Salmonella suggests that DON can promote the spread of the bacterium within pigeon populations.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5172580PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0168205PLOS

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