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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2008, p. 4564-4566, Vol. 74, No. 14
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02528-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
Therapeutic Supplementation of Caprylic Acid in Feed Reduces Campylobacter jejuni Colonization in Broiler Chicks 
F. Solis de los Santos,1
A. M. Donoghue,2
K. Venkitanarayanan,3
I. Reyes-Herrera,1
J. H. Metcalf,1
M. L. Dirain,1
V. F. Aguiar,1
P. J. Blore,1 and
D. J. Donoghue1*
Poultry Science Department, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701,1
Poultry Production and Product Safety Research Unit, Agricultural Research Service, USDA, Fayetteville, Arkansas 72701,2
Department of Animal Science, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 062693
Received 8 November 2007/
Accepted 12 May 2008

ABSTRACT
Poultry colonized with
Campylobacter species are a significant
source of human food-borne illness. The therapeutic use of the
medium chain fatty acid caprylic acid consistently reduced enteric
C. jejuni colonization in chicks by 3 to 4 logs in three separate
trials. These results support caprylic acid's potential to reduce
Campylobacter carriage in poultry.

INTRODUCTION
Campylobacter species are some of the most commonly reported
bacterial causes of human food-borne illnesses in the United
States, and epidemiological evidence indicates that poultry
and poultry products are significant sources of human infection
(
6,
10,
18). Contamination with
Campylobacter originates from
environmental sources, including flies, rodents, and wild birds
(
11,
17), and spreads rapidly through the flock (
14). Even with
biosecurity measures,
Campylobacter colonization is widespread
in most poultry flocks (
4,
15,
29).
Cecal carriage of C. jejuni results in horizontal transmission of the pathogen and in carcass contamination during slaughter. Therefore, interventional strategies implemented at the farms for reducing C. jejuni counts in the chicken intestinal tract are critical for delivering a microbiologically safer product. Fatty acids, especially medium chain fatty acids, were found to have antimicrobial properties for a wide range of microorganisms (2, 3, 16, 19, 24, 27). Recently, Thormar and coworkers (26) reported that monocaprin, the monoglyceride of capric acid, was effective in killing significant populations of C. jejuni in chicken feed. Caprylic acid is a medium chain fatty acid with eight carbons naturally found in breast milk, bovine milk, and coconut oil (12, 13, 16). It is a food-grade compound classified as generally recognized as safe (GRAS) by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. We recently demonstrated the prophylactic efficacy of feed supplemented with caprylic acid against Campylobacter colonization in 10-day-old broiler chicks (23). This strategy provides a potentially important method for limiting Campylobacter colonization; however, strategies are needed to reduce Campylobacter populations after colonization in poultry has already occurred. Therefore, the objective of the present study was to determine the therapeutic effect of feed supplemented with caprylic acid on C. jejuni colonization in broiler chicks.

Experimental design.
In three separate trials, day-of-hatch commercial broiler chicks
(
n = 60 per trial; mixed sex) were assigned to six treatment
groups (
n = 10 per group): negative controls (no
Campylobacter;
no caprylic acid); positive controls (
Campylobacter; no caprylic
acid); and four caprylic acid treatment groups (based on caprylic
acid doses of 0.35%, 0.7%, 1.4%, and 2.8%). These doses were
selected since all doses were equally effective at killing
Campylobacter within 1 h in vitro (data not shown). Caprylic acid (Sigma-Aldrich,
St. Louis, MO) was supplemented in starter feed for the last
72 h of each 15-day trial. At 3 days of age, chicks were inoculated
with five wild-type strains of
C. jejuni (
8), and at 15 days
of age, chicks were euthanized, and cecal contents were collected
for
Campylobacter enumeration (
7). Birds were individually weighed
on days 12 and 15 to determine body weight differences, feed
consumption, and feed conversion during the treatment period.
There was no morbidity or mortality during the treatment period.
Based on the results from trials 1 and 2, intestinal samples from chicks fed with 0.7% and 1.4% caprylic acid and the positive control (0% caprylic acid) were collected for enteric morphometric analysis in trial 3 on day 15 of the experiment. Segments (2 cm) of the midpoint of the duodenum, jejunum, ileum, and cecum were prepared and evaluated (22). Twenty replicates for each variable studied (villus height, base, surface area, crypt depth, lamina propria thickness, and neutral goblet cell density) were measured for each sample. Data were analyzed by analysis of variance, using the GLM procedure of SAS, with means partitioned by LSMEANS analysis (STAT user's guide, release version 9.03; SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC).
The results of this study demonstrate that select doses of caprylic acid, when fed for only 3 days, can consistently reduce enteric Campylobacter populations in young chickens already colonized with the bacterium (Fig. 1). In three separate trials, supplementation of a 0.7% and a 1.4% dose of caprylic acid reduced cecal Campylobacter counts substantially compared with those in the positive controls. Supplementation of caprylic acid at 0.35% and 2.8% levels had an inconsistent effect on the reduction of C. jejuni populations in the cecal content.
Since caprylic acid is a natural and GRAS-designated feed additive,
it could be used immediately by poultry farmers to reduce
C. jejuni carriage in chickens. Using the 0.7 and 1.4% doses, we
observed a consistent 3- to 4-log reduction in cecal
Campylobacter populations in chicks. This could have significant beneficial
implications for food safety, since, during processing, enteric
contents can contaminate the carcass, thereby resulting in food-borne
transmission of
C. jejuni. (
1,
21). It has been estimated that
a 2-log reduction in
C. jejuni populations on poultry carcass
contaminations could bring about a 30-fold reduction in human
campylobacteriosis cases (
20). The use of caprylic acid should
be accepted by poultry producers, since it does not have any
adverse effect on parameters important for production (profit)
or health such as morbidity, mortality, body weight gain, or
feed conversion (Table
1). The cost of treatment would be limited
($2 to 3/kg; KIC Chemicals Inc., New Paltz, NY) because it has
therapeutic efficacy and would be used only for the last 3 days
prior to slaughter. This dosing strategy would have the added
benefit of preventing the reestablishment of higher
C. jejuni populations, since there would be no withdrawal period prior
to slaughter.
The mechanism of caprylic acid-mediated
Campylobacter reduction
in chicks is not clear but may be due to the diffusion of caprylic
acid into bacterial cells in the undissociated form and dissociation
within the protoplasm, thereby leading to intracellular acidification
(
25). A lower intracellular pH can lead to inactivation of intracellular
enzymes (
28) and inhibition of amino acid transport (
9). Based
on previous morphometric analysis, we postulated that another
possible mechanism of action of caprylic acid may be a physical
or functional alteration of the gastrointestinal colonization
site of
C. jejuni in chicks. Our previous research with poults
fed bacteriocins found that the reduction in
Campylobacter counts
was associated with an alteration in the preferential gastrointestinal
colonization sites for this organism (
7). In the present study,
caprylic acid supplementation showed either no effects or inconsistent
effects on gastrointestinal morphology (data not shown), suggesting
that other mechanisms are responsible for the reduction observed
for cecal
C. jejuni counts. Caprylic acid may compromise the
outer membrane determinants in
Campylobacter bacteria that are
needed for bacterial adaptation to the host environment and
colonization, or it may have a direct inhibitory effect on the
expression of virulence factors necessary for
C. jejuni colonization.
However, additional research is necessary to confirm these hypotheses
and to determine why the highest dose of caprylic acid (2.8%)
was not consistently effective. It is possible that higher doses
of caprylic acid alter competing intestinal microflora, allowing
higher
Campylobacter carriage.
In conclusion, the results of the present study suggest that therapeutic supplementation of caprylic acid for 3 days reduced Campylobacter populations in the cecal content of chicks by 3 to 4 logs. Follow-up studies are currently under way to elucidate the mechanism(s) by which caprylic acid reduces enteric Campylobacter carriage in poultry.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
This work was supported in part by USDA, CSREES National Integrated
Food Safety Program grant no. 2006-02429 to K. Venkitanarayanan
and D. J. Donoghue.
Mention of a trade name, proprietary product, or specific equipment does not constitute a guarantee or warranty by the USDA and does not imply its approval to the exclusion of other products that are suitable.

FOOTNOTES
* Corresponding author. Mailing address: POSC O-408, 1260 W. Maple St., University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR 72701. Phone: (479) 575-2913. Fax: (479) 575-4202. E-mail:
ddonogh{at}uark.edu 
Published ahead of print on 23 May 2008. 

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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, July 2008, p. 4564-4566, Vol. 74, No. 14
0099-2240/08/$08.00+0 doi:10.1128/AEM.02528-07
Copyright © 2008, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.
This article has been cited by other articles:
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(2009). The natural feed additive caprylic acid decreases Campylobacter jejuni colonization in market-aged broiler chickens. Poult. Sci.
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