Kansas Agricultural Experiment Station and Cooperative Extension Service
Abstract
Dairy Research, 2010 is known as Dairy Day, 2010Three experiments were conducted to characterize lysine fermentation by Fusobacterium
necrophorum, a ruminal bacterium that is known to degrade amino acids. In Experiment 1,
7 strains of Fusobacterium necrophorum were inoculated into media containing lysine (50 mM),
lactate (50 mM), or lysine plus lactate (50 mM each) as the major energy substrate to evaluate
growth and ammonia production. All strains grew with lysine, lactate, or lactate plus lysine as
the primary substrate. When grown with lysine, all strains produced ammonia as an end product,
even if lactate was also present. Smaller concentrations of ammonia for medium containing
lactate plus lysine when compared with lysine alone indicate that the Fusobacterium strains used
lactate as a growth substrate that stimulated utilization of ammonia. In Experiment 2, the
2 strains tested were able to degrade extensively both lysine and glutamic acid. Some evidence
was detected for partial utilization for growth of histidine, methionine, and tryptophan by
strain A21. In Experiment 3, the minimum inhibitory concentration (MIC) of the antibiotic
tylosin was 25 μg/mL when Fusobacterium necrophorum strains A21 and B35 were grown in
either lysine or lactate-enriched medium. The MIC of monensin was 6.25 and 3.9 μg/mL for
strains A21 and B35, respectively, when grown in lysine-enriched medium, but > 50 and
10.9 μg/mL when the strains were grown in lactate-enriched medium. These findings may lead
to ways that ruminal lysine degradation may be controlled