ARCHIVES OF ANIMAL NUTRITION, cilt.61, sa.2, ss.126-134, 2007 (SCI-Expanded, Scopus)
Forty-eight male lambs were used to evaluate the effect of dietary supplementation of mannanoligosaccharide
(MOS) with or without parenteral
Escherichia coli injection on their growth performance,
feed conversion efficiency, blood metabolites, total serum immunoglobulin G (IgG) levels and antibody
response. Lambs were randomly assigned to four groups of 12 animals each. In groups C (control) and
CE (
E. coli challenged), animals were fed commercial concentrate pellets and hay (50:50), and in groups
M (MOS) and ME (MOS
ş E. coli challenged), animals were fed commercial concentrate pellets
including MOS at 0.2% and hay (50:50). At day 15 and 30, animals in groups CE and ME were injected
subcutaneously with 1 ml of phosphate buffered saline (PBS) suspension containing 10
6 cfu of heat
inactivated non-toxigenic
E. coli O157:H7, while animals in C and M groups were injected
subcutaneously with 1 ml of PBS. The experimental period was 45 days. Data indicated that body
weight of lambs at the end of the study were statistically non-significant among the groups. Blood
metabolites, i.e. total protein, albumin, calcium and phosphorus concentrations were not affected
significantly by MOS supplementation. However, administration
E. coli lowered (p50.05) total
protein, albumin and calcium concentrations in the serum on day 30. The IgG level was not different
between groups. However, on day 45, the total IgG level was found to be higher (
p50.05) in lambs that
had received MOS and
E. coli than in other groups. Application of MOS did not have any effect on the
antibody response to
E. coli as OD values