Abstract

Simple SummaryIn horses, tapeworm infection is associated with specific forms of colic (abdominal pain) that can be life-threatening without surgical treatment. There is growing evidence that intestinal parasites interact with the gut bacteria, and the consequences of these interactions may influence the ability of the host to resist infection and parasite-associated disease. We aimed to compare the intestinal bacteria and the gases produced by metabolic processes in the gut between horses that had varying levels of tapeworms and those with no tapeworm present. Overall, the diversity of gut bacteria was similar in horses with and without tapeworms. There were some decreases in beneficial bacteria in horses with tapeworms, indicating a possible negative consequence of infection. Intestinal gases correlated with some bacteria indicating their functionality and use as potential markers of active bacteria. Our study validates further research investigating tapeworm and gut bacteria interactions in the horse.Anoplocephala perfoliata is a common equine tapeworm associated with an increased risk of colic (abdominal pain) in horses. Identification of parasite and intestinal microbiota interactions have consequences for understanding the mechanisms behind parasite-associated colic and potential new methods for parasite control. A. perfoliata was diagnosed by counting of worms in the caecum post-mortem. Bacterial DNA was extracted from colonic contents and sequenced targeting of the 16S rRNA gene (V4 region). The volatile organic compound (VOC) metabolome of colonic contents was characterised using gas chromatography mass spectrometry. Bacterial diversity (alpha and beta) was similar between tapeworm infected and non-infected controls. Some compositional differences were apparent with down-regulation of operational taxonomic units (OTUs) belonging to the symbiotic families of Ruminococcaceae and Lachnospiraceae in the tapeworm-infected group. Overall tapeworm burden accounted for 7–8% of variation in the VOC profile (permutational multivariate analysis of variance). Integration of bacterial OTUs and VOCs demonstrated moderate to strong correlations indicating the potential of VOCs as markers for bacterial OTUs in equine colonic contents. This study has shown potential differences in the intestinal microbiome and metabolome of A. perfoliata infected and non-infected horses. This pilot study did not control for extrinsic factors including diet, disease history and stage of infection.

Highlights

  • The gastrointestinal tapeworm Anoplocephala perfoliata is a common inhabitant of the equine gut [1,2]

  • Results are shown for Volatile Organic Compound (VOC) which were significantly different in abundance (p < 0.05, t-test) prior to FDR and their corrected p-values

  • Bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were better at separating TP and CO groups than VOCs (Figure 5C,D)

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Summary

Introduction

The gastrointestinal tapeworm Anoplocephala perfoliata is a common inhabitant of the equine gut [1,2]. Anthelmintic resistance is a growing concern regarding the effective control of other equine parasites, such as strongyles and Parascaris equorum and may limit our ability to treat tapeworm infection in the future [8,9]. This is a particular concern given the small number of drug classes that are available to treat cestode burdens in horses [9,10]. This places greater emphasis on the need to better detect the presence of tapeworms and target treatments . A faecal egg count (FEC) can be conducted, but this has only 61% sensitivity [15]

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