4.7 Article

Multi-omits Analysis Revealed Coordinated Responses of Rumen Microbiome and Epithelium to High-Grain-Induced Subacute Rumen Acidosis in Lactating Dairy Cows

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MSYSTEMS
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 -

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AMER SOC MICROBIOLOGY

关键词

bacterial cooccurrence; cholesterol biosynthesis; high-grain diet; network analysis; rumen bacteria and epithelium; rumen metabolome

资金

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2021YFF1000700]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities (Beijing) [JCQY201905]
  3. high-performance computing platform of the Bioinformatics Center, Nanjing Agricultural University

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The study found that high-grain feeding can induce subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA) in dairy cows, resulting in thickened rumen epithelial papilla with edge injury and decreased plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration. 16S rRNA gene sequencing results showed that high-grain feeding caused changes in rumen bacterial structure and composition, while metabolomics analysis indicated the enrichment of certain detrimental metabolites in rumen fluid and the upregulation of cholesterol biosynthesis genes in rumen epithelium.
Subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA) is a major metabolic disease in lactating dairy cows caused by the excessive intake of high-concentrate diets. Here, we investigated the synergistic responses of rumen bacteria and epithelium to high-grain (HG)-induced SARA. Eight ruminally cannulated lactating Holstein cows were randomly assigned to 2 groups for a 3-week experiment and fed either a conventional (CON) diet or an HG diet. The results showed that the HG-feeding cows had a thickened rumen epithelial papilla with edge injury and a decreased plasma beta-hydroxybutyrate concentration. The 16S rRNA gene sequencing results demonstrated that FIG feeding caused changes in rumen bacterial structure and composition, which further altered rumen fermentation and metabolism. Cooccurrence network analysis revealed that the distribution of the diet-sensitive bacteria responded to the treatment (CON or HG) and that all diet-sensitive amplicon sequence variants showed low to medium degrees of cooccurrence. Metabolomics analysis indicated that the endothelial permeability-increasing factor prostaglandin El and the polyamine synthesis by-product 5'-methylthioadenosine were enriched under HG feeding. Transcriptome analysis suggested that cholesterol biosynthesis genes were upregulated in the rumen epithelium of HG cows. The gene expression changes, coupled with more substrate being available (total volatile fatty acids), may have caused an enrichment of intracellular cholesterol and its metabolites. All of these variations could coordinately stimulate cell proliferation, increase membrane permeability, and trigger epithelial inflammation, which eventually disrupts rumen homeostasis and negatively affects cow health. IMPORTANCE Dairy cows are economically important livestock animals that supply milk for humans. The cow's rumen is a complex and symbiotic ecosystem composed of diverse microorganisms, which has evolved to digest high-fiber diets. In modern dairy production, SARA is a common health problem due to overfeeding of high-concentrate diets for an ever-increasing milk yield. Although extensive studies have been conducted on SARA, it remains unclear how HG feeding affects rumen cross talk homeostasis. Here, we identified structural and taxonomic fluctuation for the rumen bacterial community, an enrichment of certain detrimental metabolites in rumen fluid, and a general upregulation of cholesterol biosynthesis genes in the rumen epithelium of HG-feeding cows by multi-omits analysis. Based on these results, we propose a speculation to explain cellular events of coordinated rumen bacterial and epithelial adaptation to HG diets. Our work provides new insights into the exploitation of molecular regulation strategies to treat and prevent SARA.

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