Effects of rearing mode on gastro-intestinal microbiota and development, immunocompetence, sanitary status and growth performance of lambs from birth to two months of age.

IF 4.9 Q1 MICROBIOLOGY
Lysiane Dunière, Philippe Ruiz, Yacine Lebbaoui, Laurie Guillot, Mickael Bernard, Evelyne Forano, Frédérique Chaucheyras-Durand
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Abstract

Background: Artificial rearing system, commonly used in prolific sheep breeds, is associated to increased mortality and morbidity rates before weaning, which might be linked to perturbations in digestive tract maturation, including microbiota colonization. This study evaluated the effect of rearing mode (mothered or artificially reared) on the establishment of the rumen and intestinal microbiome of lambs from birth to weaning. We also measured immunological and zootechnical parameters to assess lambs' growth and health. GIT anatomy as well as rumen and intestinal epithelium gene expression were also analysed on weaned animals to assess possible long-term effects of the rearing practice.

Results: Total VFA concentrations were higher in mothered lambs at 2 months of age, while artificially-reared lambs had lower average daily gain, a more degraded sanitary status and lower serum IgG concentration in the early growth phase. Metataxonomic analysis revealed higher richness of bacterial and eukaryote populations in mothered vs. artificially-reared lambs in both Rumen and Feces. Beta diversity analysis indicated an evolution of rumen and fecal bacterial communities in mothered lambs with age, not observed in artificially-reared lambs. Important functional microorganisms such as the cellulolytic bacterium Fibrobacter succinogenes and rumen protozoa did not establish correctly before weaning in artificially-reared lambs. Enterobacteriaceae and Escherichia coli were dominant in the fecal microbiota of mothered lambs, but main E. coli virulence genes were not found differential between the two groups, suggesting they are commensal bacteria which could exert a protective effect against pathogens. The fecal microbiota of artificially-reared lambs had a high proportion of lactic acid bacteria taxa. No difference was observed in mucosa gene expression in the two lamb groups after weaning.

Conclusions: The rearing mode influences gastrointestinal microbiota and health-associated parameters in offspring in early life: rumen maturation was impaired in artificially-reared lambs which also presented altered sanitary status and higher risk of gut dysbiosis. The first month of age is thus a critical period where the gastrointestinal tract environment and microbiota are particularly unstable and special care should be taken in the management of artificially fed newborn ruminants.

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不同饲养方式对出生~ 2月龄羔羊胃肠道菌群及发育、免疫能力、卫生状况和生长性能的影响
背景:人工饲养系统通常用于高产羊品种,断奶前死亡率和发病率增加,这可能与消化道成熟的扰动有关,包括微生物群定植。本研究评价了不同饲养方式(母养或人工饲养)对羔羊出生至断奶期间瘤胃和肠道微生物群建立的影响。我们还测量了免疫和动物技术参数来评估羔羊的生长和健康。还分析了断奶动物的胃肠道解剖结构以及瘤胃和肠上皮基因表达,以评估这种饲养方式可能产生的长期影响。结果:母羊在2月龄时总VFA浓度较高,而人工饲养羔羊在生长早期平均日增重较低,卫生状况较差,血清IgG浓度较低。元分类学分析显示,母羊和人工饲养的羔羊在瘤胃和粪便中细菌和真核生物种群的丰富度更高。β多样性分析表明,母羊的瘤胃和粪便细菌群落随着年龄的增长而进化,而在人工饲养的羔羊中没有观察到。重要的功能性微生物,如纤维素分解细菌琥珀酸纤维杆菌和瘤胃原生动物在人工饲养的羔羊断奶前不能正确建立。母羊粪便菌群以肠杆菌科和大肠杆菌为主,但大肠杆菌主要毒力基因在两组间无差异,提示它们是共生菌,对病原菌具有保护作用。人工饲养羔羊粪便微生物群中乳酸菌类群比例较高。断奶后两组羔羊的黏膜基因表达无差异。结论:人工饲养方式影响后代早期胃肠道微生物群和健康相关参数:人工饲养的羔羊瘤胃成熟受损,卫生状况改变,肠道生态失调的风险更高。因此,1月龄是胃肠道环境和微生物群特别不稳定的关键时期,在人工喂养新生反刍动物时应特别注意。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
7.20
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