3 research outputs found
Metagenomic analysis of rumen microbial population in dairy heifers fed a high grain diet supplemented with dicarboxylic acids or polyphenols
Background: The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of two feed supplements on rumen bacterial
communities of heifers fed a high grain diet. Six Holstein-Friesian heifers received one of the following dietary
treatments according to a Latin square design: no supplement (control, C), 60 g/day of fumarate-malate (organic
acid, O) and 100 g/day of polyphenol-essential oil (P). Rumen fluid was analyzed to assess the microbial population
using Illumina sequencing and quantitative real time PCR.
Results: The P treatment had the highest number of observed species (P < 0.10), Chao1 index (P < 0.05), abundance
based coverage estimated (ACE) (P < 0.05), and Fisher\u2019s alpha diversity (P < 0.10). The O treatment had intermediate
values between C and P treatments with the exception of the Chao1 index. The PCoA with unweighted Unifrac
distance showed a separation among dietary treatments (P = 0.09), above all between the C and P (P = 0.05). The O
and P treatments showed a significant increase of the family Christenenellaceae and a decline of Prevotella brevis
compared to C. Additionally, the P treatment enhanced the abundance of many taxa belonging to Bacteroidetes,
Firmicutes and Tenericutes phyla due to a potential antimicrobial activity of flavonoids that increased competition
among bacteria.
Conclusions: Organic acid and polyphenols significantly modified rumen bacterial populations during high-grain
feeding in dairy heifers. In particular the polyphenol treatment increased the richness and diversity of rumen microbiota,
which are usually high in conditions of physiological rumen pH and rumen function