Affiliation:
1. Christian Doppler Laboratory for Innovative Gut Health Concepts of Livestock, Department for Farm Animals and Veterinary Public Health Institute of Animal Nutrition and Functional Plant Compounds, University of Veterinary Medicine Vienna Austria
2. Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Sherbrooke Research and Development Centre Sherbrooke Canada
3. Christian Doppler Laboratory for Innovative Gut Health Concepts of Livestock, Department of Agrobiotechnology (IFA-Tulln) Institute of Bioanalytics and Agro-Metabolomics, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences Vienna Austria
Abstract
Abstract
Aim
This study aimed to characterize the critical points for determining the development of dysbiosis associated with feed intolerances and ruminal acidosis.
Methods and Results
A metabologenomics approach was used to characterize dynamic microbial and metabolomics shifts using the rumen simulation technique (RUSITEC) by feeding native cornstarch (ST), chemically modified cornstarch (CMS), or sucrose (SU). SU and CMS elicited the most drastic changes as rapidly as 4 h after feeding. This was accompanied by a swift accumulation of d-lactate, and the decline of benzoic and malonic acid. A consistent increase in Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus as well as a decrease in fibrolytic bacteria was observed for both CMS and ST after 24 h, indicating intolerances within the fibre degrading populations. However, an increase in Lactobacillus was already evident in SU after 8 h. An inverse relationship between Fibrobacter and Bifidobacterium was observed in ST. In fact, Fibrobacter was positively correlated with several short-chain fatty acids, while Lactobacillus was positively correlated with lactic acid, hexoses, hexose-phosphates, pentose phosphate pathway (PENTOSE-P-PWY), and heterolactic fermentation (P122-PWY).
Conclusions
The feeding of sucrose and modified starches, followed by native cornstarch, had a strong disruptive effect in the ruminal microbial community. Feed intolerances were shown to develop at different rates based on the availability of glucose for ruminal microorganisms.
Significance and Impact of the study
These results can be used to establish patterns of early dysbiosis (biomarkers) and develop strategies for preventing undesirable shifts in the ruminal microbial ecosystem.
Funder
Christian Doppler Forschungsgesellschaft
BIOMIN GmbH
National Foundation for Research, Technology and Development
Federal Ministry for Digital and Economic Affairs
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,General Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
4 articles.
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