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- Title
Assessment of microbiome changes after rumen transfaunation: implications on improving feed efficiency in beef cattle.
- Authors
Zhou, Mi; Peng, Yong-Jia; Chen, Yanhong; Klinger, Christen M.; Oba, Masahito; Liu, Jian-Xin; Guan, Le Luo
- Abstract
Background: Understanding the host impact on its symbiotic microbiota is important in redirecting the rumen microbiota and thus improving animal performance. The current study aimed to understand how rumen microbiota were altered and re-established after being emptied and receiving content from donor, thus to understand the impact of such process on rumen microbial fermentation and to explore the microbial phylotypes with higher manipulation potentials. Results: Individual animal had strong effect on the re-establishment of the bacterial community according to the observed profiles detected by both fingerprinting and pyrosequencing. Most of the bacterial profile recovery patterns and extents at genus level varied among steers; and each identified bacterial genus responded to transfaunation differently within each host. <italic>Coriobacteriaceae</italic>, <italic>Coprococcus</italic>, and <italic>Lactobacillus</italic> were found to be the most responsive and tunable genera by exchanging rumen content. Besides, the association of 18 bacterial phylotypes with host fermentation parameters suggest that these phylotypes should also be considered as the regulating targets in improving host feed efficiency. In addition, the archaeal community had different re-establishment patterns for each host as determined by fingerprint profiling: it was altered after receiving non-native microbiome in some animals, while it resumed its original status after the adaptation period in the other ones. Conclusions: The highly individualized microbial re-establishment process suggested the importance of considering host genetics, microbial functional genomics, and host fermentation/performance assessment when developing effective and selective microbial manipulation methods for improving animal feed efficiency.
- Publication
Microbiome, 2018, Vol 6, p1
- ISSN
2049-2618
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/s40168-018-0447-y