Effects clay mineral supplementation on particle-associated and epimural microbiota, and gene expression in the rumen of cows fed high-concentrate diet.

This study evaluated the effects of a clay-mineral based product (CM) on PaM, EpM, fermentation parameters, and epithelial gene expression in cows fed a high-concentrate diet. Eight rumen-cannulated non-lactating Holstein cows received a concentrate mix supplemented with CM or not (CON) in a change-over design with an initial 100% roughage diet phase (RD, 1 week), followed by intermittent 65%-high-concentrate-diet phases (HC1, HC2; 1 and 2 week duration, respectively), interrupted by 1 week roughage only. Rumen samples for short-chain fatty acids, ammonia, and lactate quantification, as well as PaM, and epithelial biopsies for EpM examination and epithelial gene expression were collected via the cannula once during each feeding phase. Phylogenetic distance analysis of Illumina MiSeq sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene region V345 showed a clear clustering of RD microbiota compared to HC in PaM, showing the impact of the high-concentrate diet on the bacterial community. In the EpM this effect was less pronounced, due to higher variability in RD. In the PaM, a decrease (P < 0.01) of community diversity occurred with the onset of HC feeding, while in the EpM there was an increase in diversity (P < 0.05). In the PaM, CM increased the relative abundance of genus Butyrivibrio (P < 0.01), a commensal bacterium of the rumen, which was, with 6.4%, the second most abundant genus. There, the CM supplementation decreased the genera Lactobacillus, Fusobacterium, and Trepo...
Source: Anaerobe - Category: Microbiology Authors: Tags: Anaerobe Source Type: research