Characterization of the Hoof Bacterial Communities of Active Digital Dermatitis Lesions in Feedlot Cattle

Author:

Wong Nicholas S. T.12ORCID,Malmuthuge Nilusha2ORCID,Gellatly Désirée3ORCID,Nordi Wiolene M.2,Alexander Trevor W.2,Ortega-Polo Rodrigo2ORCID,Janzen Eugene4,Jelinski Murray1ORCID,Schwartzkopf-Genswein Karen12

Affiliation:

1. Large Animal Clinical Sciences, Western College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatoon, SK S7N 5C9, Canada

2. Lethbridge Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, Lethbridge, AB T1J 4B1, Canada

3. Technology Access Centre for Livestock, Olds College of Agriculture & Technology, Olds, AB T4H 1R6, Canada

4. Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB T2N 4N1, Canada

Abstract

Digital dermatitis (DD) is a costly hoof infection, causing lameness and pain in feedlot cattle. DD lesions can develop nonlinearly through a series of clinical stages, which can be classified by Dopfer’s M-stage scoring system. This widely adopted lesion scoring system recognizes five DD stages, where M1 (early lesion), M2 (acute ulcerative lesion), and M4.1 (chronic proliferative lesion with new developing lesion) are considered active but separate stages of the disease. This study assessed the skin surface microbiota of the active DD lesions of feedlot cattle. The DD lesions from three commercial feedlots were swabbed and then scored according to Dopfer’s M-stage scoring system. Swab samples were collected from 12 M2- and 15 M4.1-stage lesions. A total of 21 control swab samples from healthy contralateral feet (DD control) were classified as stage M0. An additional six skin swabs (M0) were collected from completely healthy (CH control) cattle with no lesions. The bacterial communities of active DD lesions (M2 and M4.1) and healthy skin (M0) were profiled using 16S amplicon sequencing. Diversity analyses showed that the hoof bacterial communities of M2 and M4.1 lesions were each distinct from those of M0 skin. However, the bacterial communities between the two active lesion stages were not different from each other. A significant increase in the relative abundance of Spirochaetota and Fusobacteriota and an overall decrease in bacterial diversity contributed to the altered bacterial communities in M2 and M4.1 lesions compared to those of healthy skin (M0). Although stages M2 and M4.1 are considered clinically different stages, the lesion-associated bacterial community is similar between the two active stages.

Funder

Beef Cattle Research Council Beef Cluster fund

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

Publisher

MDPI AG

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