4.7 Article

Fungal and ciliate protozoa are the main rumen microbes associated with methane emissions in dairy cattle

Journal

GIGASCIENCE
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gigascience/giab088

Keywords

dairy cattle; microbiome; rumen; methane; Nanopore; long reads

Funding

  1. National Plan of Research, Development and Innovation 2013-2020 [RTA2015-00022-C03-02]
  2. Department of Economic Development and Competitiveness (Madrid, Spain)
  3. FPI-INIA [FPI-SGIT2016-06]

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This study analyzed the whole rumen metagenome to understand the role of rumen microbes in methane emissions. The results show a subtle association between methane production and overall microbiota composition, with certain genera and KEGGs significantly associated with methane production. High methane emissions are linked to higher relative abundance of ciliates and fungi, while low emissions are associated with bacteria.
Background Mitigating the effects of global warming has become the main challenge for humanity in recent decades. Livestock farming contributes to greenhouse gas emissions, with an important output of methane from enteric fermentation processes, mostly in ruminants. Because ruminal microbiota is directly involved in digestive fermentation processes and methane biosynthesis, understanding the ecological relationships between rumen microorganisms and their active metabolic pathways is essential for reducing emissions. This study analysed whole rumen metagenome using long reads and considering its compositional nature in order to disentangle the role of rumen microbes in methane emissions. Results The beta -diversity analyses suggested a subtle association between methane production and overall microbiota composition (0.01 < R-2 < 0.02). Differential abundance analysis identified 36 genera and 279 KEGGs as significantly associated with methane production (P-adj < 0.05). Those genera associated with high methane production were Eukaryota from Alveolata and Fungi clades, while Bacteria were associated with low methane emissions. The genus-level association network showed 2 clusters grouping Eukaryota and Bacteria, respectively. Regarding microbial gene functions, 41 KEGGs were found to be differentially abundant between low- and high-emission animals and were mainly involved in metabolic pathways. No KEGGs included in the methane metabolism pathway (ko00680) were detected as associated with high methane emissions. The KEGG network showed 3 clusters grouping KEGGs associated with high emissions, low emissions, and not differentially abundant in either. A deeper analysis of the differentially abundant KEGGs revealed that genes related with anaerobic respiration through nitrate degradation were more abundant in low-emission animals. Conclusions Methane emissions are largely associated with the relative abundance of ciliates and fungi. The role of nitrate electron acceptors can be particularly important because this respiration mechanism directly competes with methanogenesis. Whole metagenome sequencing is necessary to jointly consider the relative abundance of Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukaryota in the statistical analyses. Nutritional and genetic strategies to reduce CH4 emissions should focus on reducing the relative abundance of Alveolata and Fungi in the rumen. This experiment has generated the largest ONT ruminal metagenomic dataset currently available.

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