132 research outputs found
Dietary calcium concentration and cereals differentially affect mineral balance and tight junction proteins expression in jejunum of weaned pigs
Ca plays an essential role in bone development; however, little is known about its effect on intestinal gene expression in juvenile animals. In the present study, thirty-two weaned pigs (9·5 (sem 0·11) kg) were assigned to four diets that differed in Ca concentration (adequate v. high) and cereal composition (wheat–barley v. maize) to assess the jejunal and colonic gene expression of nutrient transporters, tight junction proteins, cytokines and pathogen-associated molecular patterns, nutrient digestibility, Ca balance and serum acute-phase response. To estimate the impact of mucosal bacteria on colonic gene expression, Spearman's correlations between colonic gene expression and bacterial abundance were computed. Faecal Ca excretion indicated that more Ca was available along the intestinal tract of the pigs fed high Ca diets as compared to the pigs fed adequate Ca diets (P0·35; P< 0·05) indicated an association between operational taxonomic units assigned to the phyla Bacteroidetes, Firmicutes and Proteobacteria and bacterial metabolites and mucosal gene expression in the colon. The present results indicate that high Ca diets have the potential to modify the jejunal and colonic mucosal gene expression response which, in turn, interacts with the composition of the basal diet and mucosa-associated bacteria in weaned pigs
Impact of Intestinal Microbiota on Growth and Feed Efficiency in Pigs: A Review
peer reviewedThis review summarises the evidence for a link between the porcine intestinal microbiota
and growth and feed e ciency (FE), and suggests microbiota-targeted strategies to improve
productivity. However, there are challenges in identifying reliable microbial predictors of host
phenotype; environmental factors impact the microbe–host interplay, sequential di erences along
the intestine result in segment-specific FE- and growth-associated taxa/functionality, and it is often
di cult to distinguish cause and e ect. However, bacterial taxa involved in nutrient processing
and energy harvest, and those with anti-inflammatory e ects, are consistently linked with improved
productivity. In particular, evidence is emerging for an association of Treponema and methanogens
such as Methanobrevibacter in the small and large intestines and Lactobacillus in the large intestine with
a leaner phenotype and/or improved FE. Bacterial carbohydrate and/or lipid metabolism pathways
are also generally enriched in the large intestine of leaner pigs and/or those with better growth/FE.
Possible microbial signalling routes linked to superior growth and FE include increased intestinal
propionate production and reduced inflammatory response. In summary, the bacterial taxa and/or
metabolic pathways identified here could be used as biomarkers for FE/growth in pigs, the taxa
exploited as probiotics or the taxa/functionality manipulated via dietary/breeding strategies in order
to improve productivity in pigs
Feed Restriction Reveals Distinct Serum Metabolome Profiles in Chickens Divergent in Feed Efficiency Traits
Publication history: Accepted - 20 February 2019; Published - 25 February 2019.Restrictive feeding influences systemic metabolism of nutrients; however, this impact
has not been evaluated in chickens of diverging feed efficiency. This study investigated the effect
of ad libitum versus restrictive feeding (85% of ad libitum) on the serum metabolome and white
blood cell composition in chickens of diverging residual feed intake (RFI; metric for feed efficiency).
Blood samples were collected between days 33 and 37 post-hatch. While serum glucose was
similar, serum uric acid and cholesterol were indicative of the nutritional status and chicken’s
RFI, respectively. Feed restriction and RFI rank caused distinct serum metabolome profiles, whereby
restrictive feeding also increased the blood lymphocyte proportion. Most importantly, 10 amino
acids were associated with RFI rank in birds, whereas restrictive feeding affected almost all detected
lysophosphatidylcholines, with 3 being higher and 6 being lower in restrictively compared to ad
libitum fed chickens. As indicated by relevance networking, isoleucine, lysine, valine, histidine, and
ornithine were the most discriminant for high RFI, whereas 3 biogenic amines (carnosine, putrescine,
and spermidine) and 3 diacyl-glycerophospholipids (38:4, 38:5, and 40:5) positively correlated with
feed intake and body weight gain, respectively. Only for taurine, feed intake mostly explained
the RFI-associated variation, whereas for most metabolites, other host physiological factors played
a greater role for the RFI-associated differences, and was potentially related to insulin-signaling,
phospholipase A2, and arachidonic acid metabolism. Alterations in the hepatic synthesis of long-chain
fatty acids and the need for precursors for gluconeogenesis due to varying energy demand may
explain the marked differences in serum metabolite profiles in ad libitum and restrictively fed birds.This project (ECO-FCE) has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework
Programme for research, technological development, and demonstration under grant agreement no. 311794
Fecal Microbiota Transplant From Highly Feed Efficient Donors Affects Cecal Physiology and Microbiota in Low- and High-Feed Efficient Chickens
Publication history: Accepted - 25 June 2019; Published online - 9 July 2019Fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) may be used to improve chicken’s feed efficiency
(FE) via modulation of the intestinal microbiota and microbe-host signaling. This study
investigated the effect of the administration of FMT from highly feed efficient donors early
in life on the jejunal and cecal microbiota, visceral organ size, intestinal morphology,
permeability, and expression of genes for nutrient transporters, barrier function and
innate immune response in chickens of diverging residual feed intake (RFI; a metric
for FE). Chicks (n = 110) were inoculated with the FMT or control transplant (CT) on
1, 6, and 9 days posthatch (dph), from which 56 chickens were selected on 30 dph
as the extremes in RFI, resulting in 15 low and 13 high RFI chickens receiving the
FMT and 14 low and 14 high RFI chickens receiving the CT. RFI rank and FMT only
caused tendencies for alterations in the jejunal microbiota and only one unclassified
Lachnospiraceae genus in cecal digesta was indicative of high RFI. By contrast, the
FMT caused clear differences in the short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) profile in the crop
and cecal microbiota composition compared to the CT, which indicated alterations
in amylolytic, pullulanolytic and hemicellulolytic bacteria such as Lactobacillus, Dorea,
and Ruminococcus. Moreover, the FMT caused alterations in intestinal development
as indicated by the longer duodenum and shallower crypts in the ceca. From the
observed RFI-associated variation, energy-saving mechanisms and moderation of the
mucosal immune response were indicated by higher jejunal permeability, shorter villi
in the ileum, and enhanced cecal expression of the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL10 in
low RFI chickens. Relationships obtained from supervised multigroup data integration
support that certain bacteria, including Ruminococcocaceae-, Lactobacillus-, and
unclassified Clostridiales-phylotypes, and SCFA in jejunal and cecal digesta modulated
expression levels of cytokines, tight-junction protein OCLN and nutrient transporters
for glucose and SCFA uptake. In conclusion, results suggest that the intestine only
Frontiers in Microbiology | www.frontiersin.org 1 July 2019 | Volume 10 | Article 1576
fmicb-10-01576 July 5, 2019 Time: 15:15 # 2
Metzler-Zebeli et al. Fecal Microbiota Transplant and Gut Functions
played a moderate role for the RFI-associated variation of the present low and high
RFI phenotypes, whereas modulating the early microbial colonization resulted in longlasting changes in bacterial taxonomic and metabolite composition as well as in host
intestinal development.This project (ECO-FCE) has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development, and demonstration under Grant Agreement No. 311794
Fecal Microbiota Transplant from Highly Feed-Efficient Donors Shows Little Effect on Age-Related Changes in Feed-Efficiency-Associated Fecal Microbiota from Chickens
peer-reviewedChickens with good or poor feed efficiency (FE) have been shown to
differ in their intestinal microbiota composition. This study investigated differences
in the fecal bacterial community of highly and poorly feed-efficient chickens at 16
and 29 days posthatch (dph) and evaluated whether a fecal microbiota transplant
(FMT) from feed-efficient donors early in life can affect the fecal microbiota in chickens at 16 and 29 dph and chicken FE and nutrient retention at 4 weeks of age. A
total of 110 chickens were inoculated with a FMT or a control transplant (CT) on
dph 1, 6, and 9 and ranked according to residual feed intake (RFI; the metric for FE)
on 30 dph. Fifty-six chickens across both inoculation groups were selected as the extremes in RFI (29 low, 27 high). RFI-related fecal bacterial profiles were discernible at
16 and 29 dph. In particular, Lactobacillus salivarius, Lactobacillus crispatus, and Anaerobacterium operational taxonomic units were associated with low RFI (good FE).
Multiple administrations of the FMT only slightly changed the fecal bacterial composition, which was supported by weighted UniFrac analysis, showing similar bacterial
communities in the feces of both inoculation groups at 16 and 29 dph. Moreover,
the FMT did not change the RFI and nutrient retention of highly and poorly feedefficient recipients, whereas it tended to increase feed intake and body weight gain
in female chickens. This finding suggests that host- and environment-related factors
may more strongly affect chicken fecal microbiota and FE than the FMT.European Union Seventh Framework Programm
Feed Restriction Modifies Intestinal Microbiota-Host Mucosal Networking in Chickens Divergent in Residual Feed Intake
Publication history: Accepted online - 8 January 2019; Published online - 29 January 2019.Differences in chickens’ feed intake may be the underlying factor influencing
feed-efficiency (FE)-associated variation in intestinal microbiota and physiology.
In chickens eating the same amount of feed, quantitative feed restriction may
create similar intestinal conditions and help clarify this cause-and-effect relationship.
This study investigated the effect of ad libitum versus restrictive feeding (85% of ad
libitum) on ileal and cecal microbiota, concentrations of short-chain fatty acids, visceral
organ size, intestinal morphology, permeability, and expression of genes related
to nutrient uptake, barrier function, and innate immune response in broiler
chickens with divergent residual feed intake (RFI; metric for FE). On day 30 posthatch,
28 low-RFI (good FE) and 29 high-RFI (poor FE) chickens across both feedinglevel
groups (n 112) were selected. Supervised multigroup data integration and
relevance network analyses showed that especially Lactobacillus (negative) in ileal digesta,
Turicibacter (positive) in cecal digesta, and Enterobacteriaceae (positive) in
both intestinal segments depended on chicken’s feed intake, whereas the level of
Anaerotruncus in cecal digesta was most discriminative for high RFI. Moreover, shallower
crypts and fewer goblet cells in ceca indicated host-related energy-saving
mechanisms with low RFI, whereas greater tissue resistance suggested a stronger jejunal
barrier function in low-RFI chickens. Values corresponding to feed intake
level RFI interactions indicated larger pancreas and lower levels of ileal and cecal
short-chain fatty acids in restrictively fed high-RFI chickens than in the other 3
groups, suggesting host physiological adaptations to support greater energy and
nutrient needs of high-RFI chickens compensating for the restricted feeding.
IMPORTANCE The impact of the FE-associated differences in feed intake on intestinal
bacterial and host physiological parameters has so far not been clarified. Understanding
the underlying principles is essential for the development of cost-effective
strategies to improve FE in chicken production. Under conditions of quantitative
feed restriction, low- and high-RFI chickens ate the same amount of feed. Therefore,
this research helps in distinguishing intestinal bacterial taxa and functions that were
highly reliant on feed intake from those that were associated with physiological adaptations
to RFI-associated differences in host nutritional needs and intestinal nutrient
availability. This work provides a background for further research to assess manipulation
of the intestinal microbiota, host physiology, and FE in chickens by
dietary intervention.This project (ECO-FCE) has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh
Framework Program for research, technological development, and demonstration under
grant agreement 311794
Microbiota of the Gut-Lymph Node Axis: Depletion of Mucosa-Associated Segmented Filamentous Bacteria and Enrichment of Methanobrevibacter by Colistin Sulfate and Linco-Spectin in Pigs
Microorganisms are translocated from the gut to lymphatic tissues via immune cells, thereby challenging and training the mammalian immune system. Antibiotics alter the gut microbiome and consecutively might also affect the corresponding translocation processes, resulting in an imbalanced state between the intestinal microbiota and the host. Hence, understanding the variant effects of antibiotics on the microbiome of gut-associated tissues is of vital importance for maintaining metabolic homeostasis and animal health. In the present study, we analyzed the microbiome of (i) pig feces, ileum, and ileocecal lymph nodes under the influence of antibiotics (Linco-Spectin and Colistin sulfate) using 16S rRNA gene sequencing for high-resolution community profiling and (ii) ileocecal lymph nodes in more detail with two additional methodological approaches, i.e., cultivation of ileocecal lymph node samples and (iii) metatranscriptome sequencing of a single lymph node sample. Supplementation of medicated feed showed a local effect on feces and ileal mucosa-associated microbiomes. Pigs that received antibiotics harbored significantly reduced amounts of segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB) along the ileal mucosa (p = 0.048; 199.17-fold change) and increased amounts of Methanobrevibacter, a methanogenic Euryarchaeote in fecal samples (p = 0.005; 20.17-fold change) compared to the control group. Analysis of the porcine ileocecal lymph node microbiome exposed large differences between the viable and the dead fraction of microorganisms and the microbiome was altered to a lesser extent by antibiotics compared with feces and ileum. The core microbiome of lymph nodes was constituted mainly of Proteobacteria. RNA-sequencing of a single lymph node sample unveiled transcripts responsible for amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism as well as protein turnover, DNA replication and signal transduction. The study presented here is the first comparative study of microbial communities in feces, ileum, and its associated ileocecal lymph nodes. In each analyzed site, we identified specific phylotypes susceptible to antibiotic treatment that can have profound impacts on the host physiological and immunological state, or even on global biogeochemical cycles. Our results indicate that pathogenic bacteria, e.g., enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, could escape antibiotic treatment by translocating to lymph nodes. In general ileocecal lymph nodes harbor a more diverse and active community of microorganisms than previously assumed
Microbiota of the Gut-Lymph Node Axis: Depletion of Mucosa-Associated Segmented Filamentous Bacteria and Enrichment of Methanobrevibacter by Colistin Sulfate and Linco-Spectin in Pigs
Microorganisms are translocated from the gut to lymphatic tissues via immune cells, thereby challenging and training the mammalian immune system. Antibiotics alter the gut microbiome and consecutively might also affect the corresponding translocation processes, resulting in an imbalanced state between the intestinal microbiota and the host. Hence, understanding the variant effects of antibiotics on the microbiome of gut-associated tissues is of vital importance for maintaining metabolic homeostasis and animal health. In the present study, we analyzed the microbiome of (i) pig feces, ileum, and ileocecal lymph nodes under the influence of antibiotics (Linco-Spectin and Colistin sulfate) using 16S rRNA gene sequencing for high-resolution community profiling and (ii) ileocecal lymph nodes in more detail with two additional methodological approaches, i.e., cultivation of ileocecal lymph node samples and (iii) metatranscriptome sequencing of a single lymph node sample. Supplementation of medicated feed showed a local effect on feces and ileal mucosa-associated microbiomes. Pigs that received antibiotics harbored significantly reduced amounts of segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB) along the ileal mucosa (p = 0.048; 199.17-fold change) and increased amounts of Methanobrevibacter, a methanogenic Euryarchaeote in fecal samples (p = 0.005; 20.17-fold change) compared to the control group. Analysis of the porcine ileocecal lymph node microbiome exposed large differences between the viable and the dead fraction of microorganisms and the microbiome was altered to a lesser extent by antibiotics compared with feces and ileum. The core microbiome of lymph nodes was constituted mainly of Proteobacteria. RNA-sequencing of a single lymph node sample unveiled transcripts responsible for amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism as well as protein turnover, DNA replication and signal transduction. The study presented here is the first comparative study of microbial communities in feces, ileum, and its associated ileocecal lymph nodes. In each analyzed site, we identified specific phylotypes susceptible to antibiotic treatment that can have profound impacts on the host physiological and immunological state, or even on global biogeochemical cycles. Our results indicate that pathogenic bacteria, e.g., enteropathogenic Escherichia coli, could escape antibiotic treatment by translocating to lymph nodes. In general ileocecal lymph nodes harbor a more diverse and active community of microorganisms than previously assumed
Feed Restriction Modulates the Fecal Microbiota Composition, Nutrient Retention, and Feed Efficiency in Chickens Divergent in Residual Feed Intake
Publication histroy: Accepted - 23 October 2018; Published - 19 November 2019.There is a great interest to understand the impact of the gut microbiota on host’s
nutrient use and FE in chicken production. Both chicken’s feed intake and gut bacterial
microbiota differ between high and low-feed efficient chickens. To evaluate the impact
of the feed intake level on the feed efficiency (FE)-associated variation in the chicken
intestinal microbiota, differently feed efficient chickens need to eat the same amount of
feed, which can be achieved by feeding chickens restrictively. Therefore, we investigated
the effect of restrictive vs. ad libitum feeding on the fecal microbiome at 16 and 29
days posthatch (dph), FE and nutrient retention in chickens of low and high residual
feed intake (RFI; metric for FE). Restrictively fed chickens were provided the same
amount of feed which corresponded to 85% of the ad libitum fed group from 9 dph.
FE was determined for the period between 9 and 30 dph and feces for nutrient retention
were collected on 31 to 32 dph. From the 112 chickens (n = 56 fed ad libitum, and
n = 56 fed restrictively), 14 low RFI and 15 high RFI ad libitum fed chickens, and
14 low RFI (n = 7 per sex) and 14 high RFI restrictively fed chickens were selected
as the extremes in RFI and were retrospectively chosen for data analysis. Bray-Curtis
dissimilarity matrices showed significant separation between time points, and feeding
level groups at 29 dph for the fecal bacterial communities. Relevance networking
indicated positive associations between Acinetobacter and feed intake at 16 dph,
whereas at 29 dph Escherichia/Shigella and Turicibacter positively and Lactobacillus
negatively correlated to chicken’s feed intake. Enterobacteriaceae was indicative for
low RFI at 16 dph, whereas Acinetobacter was linked to high RFI across time points.
However, restrictive feeding-associated changes in the fecal microbiota were not similar
in low and high RFI chickens, whichmay have been related to the higher nutrient retention
and thus lower fecal nutrient availability in restrictively fed high RFI chickens. Thismay also
explain the decreased RFI value in restrictively fed high RFI chickens indicating improved
FE, with a stronger effect in females.This project (ECO-FCE) has received funding from the
European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research,
technological development and demonstration under grant
agreement No. 311794
Fecal Microbiota Transplantation in Gestating Sows and Neonatal Offspring Alters Lifetime Intestinal Microbiota and Growth in Offspring
Previous studies suggest a link between intestinal microbiota and porcine feed efficiency (FE). Therefore, we investigated whether fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) in sows and/or neonatal offspring, using inocula derived from highly feed-efficient pigs, could improve offspring FE. Pregnant sows were assigned to control or FMT treatments and the subsequent offspring to control treatment, FMT once (at birth), or FMT four times (between birth and weaning). FMT altered sow fecal and colostrum microbiota compositions and resulted in lighter offspring body weight at 70 and 155 days of age when administered to sows and/or offspring. This was accompanied by FMT-associated changes within the offspring?s intestinal microbiota, mostly in the ileum. These included transiently higher fecal bacterial diversity and load and numerous compositional differences at the phylum and genus levels (e.g., Spirochaetes and Bacteroidetes at high relative abundances and mostly members of Clostridia, respectively), as well as differences in the abundances of predicted bacterial pathways. In addition, intestinal morphology was negatively impacted, duodenal gene expression altered, and serum protein and cholesterol concentrations reduced due to FMT in sows and/or offspring. Taken together, the results suggest poorer absorptive capacity and intestinal health, most likely explaining the reduced body weight. An additive effect of FMT in sows and offspring also occurred for some parameters. Although these findings have negative implications for the practical use of the FMT regime used here for improving FE in pigs, they nonetheless demonstrate the enormous impact of early-life intestinal microbiota on the host phenotype.publishersversionPeer reviewe
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