Modulation of the porcine intestinal microbiota in the course of Ascaris suum infection

Author:

Springer Andrea,Wagner Liane,Koehler Sarina,Klinger Stefanie,Breves Gerhard,Brüggemann Dagmar A.,Strube Christina

Abstract

Abstract Background The porcine roundworm Ascaris suum impairs feed conversion and weight gain, but its effects on intestinal microbiota remain largely unexplored. Methods Modulation of the intestinal microbiota was assessed in pigs that were infected once with 10,000 A. suum eggs and pigs that received a trickle infection (1000 eggs/day over 10 days), compared with a non-infected control group. Six pigs each were sacrificed per group at days 21, 35 and 49 post-infection (p.i.). Faecal samples taken weekly until slaughter and ingesta samples from different intestinal compartments were subjected to next-generation sequencing of the bacterial 16S rRNA gene. Results The results revealed marked differences between the single- and the trickle-infected group. Single infection caused a remarkable but transient decrease in microbial diversity in the caecum, which was not observed in the trickle-infected group. However, an increase in short-chain fatty acid-producing genera in the caecum on day 21 p.i., which shifted to a decrease on day 35 p.i., was common to both groups, possibly related to changes in excretory–secretory products following the parasite’s final moult. Faecal microbial interaction networks were more similar between the single-infected and control group than the trickle-infected group. In addition, a lower degree of similarity over time indicated that A. suum trickle infection prevented microbiota stabilization. Conclusions These different patterns may have important implications regarding the comparability of experimental infections with natural scenarios characterized by continuous exposure, and should be confirmed by further studies. Graphical Abstract

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Stiftung Tierärztliche Hochschule Hannover (TIHO)

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

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