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Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period
Dairy cows experience dramatic changes in host physiology from gestation to lactation period and dietary switch from high-forage prepartum diet to high-concentrate postpartum diet over the transition period (parturition +/- three weeks). Understanding the community structure and activity of the rume...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , , |
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Formato: | Online Artículo Texto |
Lenguaje: | English |
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Public Library of Science
2017
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5678694/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29117259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187858 |
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author | Zhu, Zhigang Noel, Samantha Joan Difford, Gareth Frank Al-Soud, Waleed Abu Brejnrod, Asker Sørensen, Søren Johannes Lassen, Jan Løvendahl, Peter Højberg, Ole |
author_facet | Zhu, Zhigang Noel, Samantha Joan Difford, Gareth Frank Al-Soud, Waleed Abu Brejnrod, Asker Sørensen, Søren Johannes Lassen, Jan Løvendahl, Peter Højberg, Ole |
author_sort | Zhu, Zhigang |
collection | PubMed |
description | Dairy cows experience dramatic changes in host physiology from gestation to lactation period and dietary switch from high-forage prepartum diet to high-concentrate postpartum diet over the transition period (parturition +/- three weeks). Understanding the community structure and activity of the rumen microbiota and its associative patterns over the transition period may provide insight for e.g. improving animal health and production. In the present study, rumen samples from ten primiparous Holstein dairy cows were collected over seven weeks spanning the transition period. Total RNA was extracted from the rumen samples and cDNA thereof was subsequently used for characterizing the metabolically active bacterial (16S rRNA transcript amplicon sequencing) and archaeal (qPCR, T-RFLP and mcrA and 16S rRNA transcript amplicon sequencing) communities. The metabolically active bacterial community was dominated by three phyla, showing significant changes in relative abundance range over the transition period: Firmicutes (from prepartum 57% to postpartum 35%), Bacteroidetes (from prepartum 22% to postpartum 18%) and Proteobacteria (from prepartum 7% to postpartum 32%). For the archaea, qPCR analysis of 16S rRNA transcript number, revealed a significant prepartum to postpartum increase in Methanobacteriales, in accordance with an observed increase (from prepartum 80% to postpartum 89%) in relative abundance of 16S rRNA transcript amplicons allocated to this order. On the other hand, a significant prepartum to postpartum decrease (from 15% to 2%) was observed in relative abundance of Methanomassiliicoccales 16S rRNA transcripts. In contrast to qPCR analysis of the 16S rRNA transcripts, quantification of mcrA transcripts revealed no change in total abundance of metabolically active methanogens over the transition period. According to T-RFLP analysis of the mcrA transcripts, two Methanobacteriales genera, Methanobrevibacter and Methanosphaera (represented by the T-RFs 39 and 267 bp), represented more than 70% of the metabolically active methanogens, showing no significant changes over the transition period; minor T-RFs, likely to represent members of the order Methanomassiliicoccales and with a relative abundance below 5% in total, decreased significantly over the transition period. In accordance with the T-RFLP analysis, the mcrA transcript amplicon sequencing revealed Methanobacteriales to cover 99% of the total reads, dominated by the genera Methanobrevibacter (75%) and Methanosphaera (24%), whereas the Methanomassiliicoccales order covered only 0.2% of the total reads. In conclusion, the present study showed that the structure of the metabolically active bacterial and archaeal rumen communities changed over the transition period, likely in response to the dramatic changes in physiology and nutritional factors like dry matter intake and feed composition. It should be noted however that for the methanogens, the observed community changes were influenced by the analyzed gene (mcrA or 16S rRNA). |
format | Online Article Text |
id | pubmed-5678694 |
institution | National Center for Biotechnology Information |
language | English |
publishDate | 2017 |
publisher | Public Library of Science |
record_format | MEDLINE/PubMed |
spelling | pubmed-56786942017-11-18 Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period Zhu, Zhigang Noel, Samantha Joan Difford, Gareth Frank Al-Soud, Waleed Abu Brejnrod, Asker Sørensen, Søren Johannes Lassen, Jan Løvendahl, Peter Højberg, Ole PLoS One Research Article Dairy cows experience dramatic changes in host physiology from gestation to lactation period and dietary switch from high-forage prepartum diet to high-concentrate postpartum diet over the transition period (parturition +/- three weeks). Understanding the community structure and activity of the rumen microbiota and its associative patterns over the transition period may provide insight for e.g. improving animal health and production. In the present study, rumen samples from ten primiparous Holstein dairy cows were collected over seven weeks spanning the transition period. Total RNA was extracted from the rumen samples and cDNA thereof was subsequently used for characterizing the metabolically active bacterial (16S rRNA transcript amplicon sequencing) and archaeal (qPCR, T-RFLP and mcrA and 16S rRNA transcript amplicon sequencing) communities. The metabolically active bacterial community was dominated by three phyla, showing significant changes in relative abundance range over the transition period: Firmicutes (from prepartum 57% to postpartum 35%), Bacteroidetes (from prepartum 22% to postpartum 18%) and Proteobacteria (from prepartum 7% to postpartum 32%). For the archaea, qPCR analysis of 16S rRNA transcript number, revealed a significant prepartum to postpartum increase in Methanobacteriales, in accordance with an observed increase (from prepartum 80% to postpartum 89%) in relative abundance of 16S rRNA transcript amplicons allocated to this order. On the other hand, a significant prepartum to postpartum decrease (from 15% to 2%) was observed in relative abundance of Methanomassiliicoccales 16S rRNA transcripts. In contrast to qPCR analysis of the 16S rRNA transcripts, quantification of mcrA transcripts revealed no change in total abundance of metabolically active methanogens over the transition period. According to T-RFLP analysis of the mcrA transcripts, two Methanobacteriales genera, Methanobrevibacter and Methanosphaera (represented by the T-RFs 39 and 267 bp), represented more than 70% of the metabolically active methanogens, showing no significant changes over the transition period; minor T-RFs, likely to represent members of the order Methanomassiliicoccales and with a relative abundance below 5% in total, decreased significantly over the transition period. In accordance with the T-RFLP analysis, the mcrA transcript amplicon sequencing revealed Methanobacteriales to cover 99% of the total reads, dominated by the genera Methanobrevibacter (75%) and Methanosphaera (24%), whereas the Methanomassiliicoccales order covered only 0.2% of the total reads. In conclusion, the present study showed that the structure of the metabolically active bacterial and archaeal rumen communities changed over the transition period, likely in response to the dramatic changes in physiology and nutritional factors like dry matter intake and feed composition. It should be noted however that for the methanogens, the observed community changes were influenced by the analyzed gene (mcrA or 16S rRNA). Public Library of Science 2017-11-08 /pmc/articles/PMC5678694/ /pubmed/29117259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187858 Text en © 2017 Zhu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. |
spellingShingle | Research Article Zhu, Zhigang Noel, Samantha Joan Difford, Gareth Frank Al-Soud, Waleed Abu Brejnrod, Asker Sørensen, Søren Johannes Lassen, Jan Løvendahl, Peter Højberg, Ole Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
title | Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
title_full | Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
title_fullStr | Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
title_full_unstemmed | Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
title_short | Community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
title_sort | community structure of the metabolically active rumen bacterial and archaeal communities of dairy cows over the transition period |
topic | Research Article |
url | https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5678694/ https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29117259 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0187858 |
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