Exploratory study of volatile fatty acids and the rumen-and-gut microbiota of dairy cows in a single farm, with respect to subclinical infection with bovine leukemia virus

IF 3 4区 生物学 Q2 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY Annals of Microbiology Pub Date : 2023-09-16 DOI:10.1186/s13213-023-01737-4
Takehito Suzuki, Hironobu Murakami, Jumpei Uchiyama, Reiichiro Sato, Iyo Takemura-Uchiyama, Masaya Ogata, Kazuyuki Sogawa, Hiroho Ishida, Apichart Atipairin, Osamu Matsushita, Makoto Nagai
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Abstract

Abstract Background Subclinical infection with bovine leukemia virus (BLV) in cows can cause economic losses in milk and meat production in many countries, as BLV-related negative effects. The volatile fatty acids (VFAs) and microbiota present in the digestive tracts of cows can contribute to cow health. Here, we exploratorily investigated the VFAs and microbiota in the rumen and gut with respect to subclinical BLV infection using cows housed at a single farm. Results We analyzed a herd of 38 cows kept at one farm, which included 15 uninfected and 23 BLV-infected cows. First, the analysis of the VFAs in the rumen, gut, and blood revealed an absence of statistically significant differences between the uninfected and BLV-infected groups. Thus, BLV infection did not cause major changes in VFA levels in all tested specimens. Next, we analyzed the rumen and gut microbiota. The analysis of the microbial diversity revealed a modest difference between the uninfected and BLV-infected groups in the gut; by contrast, no differences were observed in the rumen. In addition, the investigation of the bacteria that were predominant in the uninfected and BLV-infected groups via a differential abundance analysis showed that no significant bacteria were present in either of the microbiota. Thus, BLV infection possibly affected the gut microbiota to a small extent. Moreover, bacterial associations were compared between the uninfected and BLV-infected groups. The results of this analysis suggested that BLV infection affected the equilibrium of the bacterial associations in both microbiota, which might be related to the BLV-related negative effects. Thus, BLV infection may negatively affect the equilibrium of bacterial associations in both microbiota. Conclusions Subclinical BLV infection is likely to affect the rumen and gut microbiota, which may partly explain the BLV-related negative effects.
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牛白血病病毒亚临床感染对单一农场奶牛挥发性脂肪酸及瘤胃和肠道微生物群的影响的探索性研究
摘要背景在许多国家,奶牛亚临床感染牛白血病病毒(BLV)会造成牛奶和肉类生产的经济损失。奶牛消化道中存在的挥发性脂肪酸(VFAs)和微生物群有助于奶牛的健康。在这里,我们探索性地研究了瘤胃和肠道中VFAs和微生物群与亚临床BLV感染的关系,研究对象是同一农场饲养的奶牛。结果我们分析了一个农场饲养的38头奶牛,其中15头未感染blv, 23头感染blv。首先,对瘤胃、肠道和血液中VFAs的分析显示,未感染组和blv感染组之间没有统计学上的显著差异。因此,BLV感染在所有测试标本中没有引起VFA水平的重大变化。接下来,我们分析了瘤胃和肠道微生物群。对肠道微生物多样性的分析显示,未感染组和blv感染组之间存在适度差异;相比之下,在瘤胃中没有观察到差异。此外,通过差异丰度分析,对未感染组和blv感染组中占优势的细菌进行了调查,结果表明,在两种微生物群中都没有显著的细菌存在。因此,BLV感染可能在很小程度上影响肠道微生物群。此外,还比较了未感染组和blv感染组之间的细菌关联。这一分析结果表明,BLV感染影响了两种微生物群中细菌关联的平衡,这可能与BLV相关的负面影响有关。因此,BLV感染可能会对两种微生物群中细菌关联的平衡产生负面影响。结论亚临床BLV感染可能影响瘤胃和肠道微生物群,这可能部分解释了BLV相关的负面影响。
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来源期刊
Annals of Microbiology
Annals of Microbiology 生物-生物工程与应用微生物
CiteScore
6.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
41
审稿时长
3.2 months
期刊介绍: Annals of Microbiology covers these fields of fundamental and applied microbiology: general, environmental, food, agricultural, industrial, ecology, soil, water, air and biodeterioration. The journal’s scope does not include medical microbiology or phytopathological microbiology. Papers reporting work on bacteria, fungi, microalgae, and bacteriophages are welcome. Annals of Microbiology publishes Review Articles, Original Articles, Short Communications, and Editorials. Originally founded as Annali Di Microbiologia Ed Enzimologia in 1940, Annals of Microbiology is an official journal of the University of Milan.
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