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The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feeding restriction (FR) is essential to reduce excessive fat deposits caused by overfeeding in hens and to ensure their reasonable nutritional requirements for egg production. Effective FR is particularly crucial for raising hens in the late phase of laying; because hens require low...

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Autores principales: Artdita, Clara Ajeng, Zhuang, Yi-Ru, Liu, Tzu-Yu, Cheng, Chih-Yuan, Hsiao, Felix Shih-Hsiang, Lin, Yuan-Yu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8614447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34827776
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11113043
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author Artdita, Clara Ajeng
Zhuang, Yi-Ru
Liu, Tzu-Yu
Cheng, Chih-Yuan
Hsiao, Felix Shih-Hsiang
Lin, Yuan-Yu
author_facet Artdita, Clara Ajeng
Zhuang, Yi-Ru
Liu, Tzu-Yu
Cheng, Chih-Yuan
Hsiao, Felix Shih-Hsiang
Lin, Yuan-Yu
author_sort Artdita, Clara Ajeng
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feeding restriction (FR) is essential to reduce excessive fat deposits caused by overfeeding in hens and to ensure their reasonable nutritional requirements for egg production. Effective FR is particularly crucial for raising hens in the late phase of laying; because hens require lower energy at this stage, overfeeding reduces their feed efficiency and increase feed costs. The gut microbiota is involved in various metabolic pathways of laying hens, including in late-phase age. Thus, changes in feeding interventions can alter the presence of gut microorganisms and the structure of the microbial community, resulting in altered metabolic regulation. In this study, we investigate the microbiota and metabolome responses of late-phase laying hens under FR. Our results provide data to access the profile of the cecal bacteria community, their relevance to cecal and serum metabolites, and their FR biosynthetic pathways related to host nutritional requirements and intestinal nutrient availability. Moreover, understanding the principles of host-microbial interaction is essential for developing cost-effective strategies to improve laying hens’ production. ABSTRACT: This study investigated cecal bacterial community profile, cecal and serum metabolites, and its biosynthesis pathway in late-phase laying hens during 6 weeks feeding restriction (FR), using 16S rDNA as gene sequencing and non-targeted LC-MS/MS as metabolomics approach. We used three groups (ad libitum, FR20, and FR40). FR can reduce excessive fat in late-phase laying hens, while egg production rate is not affected, except for the FR40 group. In phylum level, FR20 had more population of Bacteriodetes and Firmicutes amongst groups. The same result is at genus level, FR20 were higher of the predominant genus (Bacteroides and Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group). Both of FR20 and FR40 reduced Proteobacteria as potential pathogenic bacteria. Non-targeted metabolomic analysis revealed that FR20 modified 20 metabolites in cecal and 10 metabolites in serum of laying hens, whereas 48 cecal metabolites and 31 serum metabolites has revealed in FR40. KEGG assay showed FR20 and FR40 upregulated lipid, carbohydrate, amino acid, nucleic acid pathway, and FR40 modified steroid metabolism in cecal analysis. In serum, only FR40 modified lipid, amino acid pathway, and carbohydrate biosynthesis were shown. This study showed that FR during late-phase laying hens altered the microbiome composition, modified metabolites profile and biosynthesis of the cecal as well as serum.
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spelling pubmed-86144472021-11-26 The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens Artdita, Clara Ajeng Zhuang, Yi-Ru Liu, Tzu-Yu Cheng, Chih-Yuan Hsiao, Felix Shih-Hsiang Lin, Yuan-Yu Animals (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Feeding restriction (FR) is essential to reduce excessive fat deposits caused by overfeeding in hens and to ensure their reasonable nutritional requirements for egg production. Effective FR is particularly crucial for raising hens in the late phase of laying; because hens require lower energy at this stage, overfeeding reduces their feed efficiency and increase feed costs. The gut microbiota is involved in various metabolic pathways of laying hens, including in late-phase age. Thus, changes in feeding interventions can alter the presence of gut microorganisms and the structure of the microbial community, resulting in altered metabolic regulation. In this study, we investigate the microbiota and metabolome responses of late-phase laying hens under FR. Our results provide data to access the profile of the cecal bacteria community, their relevance to cecal and serum metabolites, and their FR biosynthetic pathways related to host nutritional requirements and intestinal nutrient availability. Moreover, understanding the principles of host-microbial interaction is essential for developing cost-effective strategies to improve laying hens’ production. ABSTRACT: This study investigated cecal bacterial community profile, cecal and serum metabolites, and its biosynthesis pathway in late-phase laying hens during 6 weeks feeding restriction (FR), using 16S rDNA as gene sequencing and non-targeted LC-MS/MS as metabolomics approach. We used three groups (ad libitum, FR20, and FR40). FR can reduce excessive fat in late-phase laying hens, while egg production rate is not affected, except for the FR40 group. In phylum level, FR20 had more population of Bacteriodetes and Firmicutes amongst groups. The same result is at genus level, FR20 were higher of the predominant genus (Bacteroides and Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group). Both of FR20 and FR40 reduced Proteobacteria as potential pathogenic bacteria. Non-targeted metabolomic analysis revealed that FR20 modified 20 metabolites in cecal and 10 metabolites in serum of laying hens, whereas 48 cecal metabolites and 31 serum metabolites has revealed in FR40. KEGG assay showed FR20 and FR40 upregulated lipid, carbohydrate, amino acid, nucleic acid pathway, and FR40 modified steroid metabolism in cecal analysis. In serum, only FR40 modified lipid, amino acid pathway, and carbohydrate biosynthesis were shown. This study showed that FR during late-phase laying hens altered the microbiome composition, modified metabolites profile and biosynthesis of the cecal as well as serum. MDPI 2021-10-24 /pmc/articles/PMC8614447/ /pubmed/34827776 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11113043 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Artdita, Clara Ajeng
Zhuang, Yi-Ru
Liu, Tzu-Yu
Cheng, Chih-Yuan
Hsiao, Felix Shih-Hsiang
Lin, Yuan-Yu
The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens
title The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens
title_full The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens
title_fullStr The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens
title_short The Effect of Feeding Restriction on the Microbiota and Metabolome Response in Late-Phase Laying Hens
title_sort effect of feeding restriction on the microbiota and metabolome response in late-phase laying hens
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8614447/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34827776
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ani11113043
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