4.6 Article

Lignocellulose Fermentation Products Generated by Giant Panda Gut Microbiomes Depend Ultimately on pH Rather than Portion of Bamboo: A Preliminary Study

期刊

MICROORGANISMS
卷 10, 期 5, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/microorganisms10050978

关键词

giant panda; hemicellulose; alpha amylase; fermentation; gut microbiome; ethanol; lactic acid; meta proteomics; 16S rRNA gene; metabolomics

资金

  1. Ghent University Multidisciplinary Research Partnership (MRP) - Biotechnology for a sustainable economy [01 MRA 510 W]
  2. University of Ghent (Belgium) [DEF13/AOF/010]

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The gut microbiome of giant pandas plays a significant role in their nutrition by helping with digestion processes, and experimental results show that green leaves are mainly fermented into ethanol while yellow pith is mainly fermented into lactate. Further research is needed to understand the effects of pH, dung samples, fermentation products, and bamboo supply on pandas.
Giant pandas feed almost exclusively on bamboo but miss lignocellulose-degrading genes. Their gut microbiome may contribute to their nutrition; however, the limited access to pandas makes experimentation difficult. In vitro incubation of dung samples is used to infer gut microbiome activity. In pandas, such tests indicated that green leaves are largely fermented to ethanol at neutral pH and yellow pith to lactate at acidic pH. Pandas may feed on either green leaves or yellow pith within the same day, and it is unclear how pH, dung sample, fermentation products and supplied bamboo relate to one another. Additionally, the gut microbiome contribution to solid bamboo digestion must be appropriately assessed. Here, gut microbiomes derived from dung samples with mixed colors were used to ferment green leaves, also by artificially adjusting the initial pH. Gut microbiomes digestion of solid lignocellulose accounted for 30-40% of the detected final fermentation products. At pH 6.5, mixed-color dung samples had the same fermentation profile as green dung samples (mainly alcohols), while adjusting the initial pH to 4.5 resulted in the profile of yellow dung samples (mainly lactate). Metaproteomics confirmed that gut microbiomes attacked hemicellulose, and that the panda's alpha amylase was the predominant enzyme (up to 75%).

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