Abstract

Rumen microbiota intervention has long been used to cure ruminal indigestion in production and has recently become a research hotspot. However, how it controls the remodeling of rumen bacterial homeostasis and the restoration of rumen fermentation in cows of subacute ruminal acidosis (SARA) remains poorly understood. This study explored changes in rumen fermentation and bacterial communities in SARA cows following rumen content transplantation (RCT). The entire experiment comprised 2 periods: the SARA induction period and the RCT period. During the SARA induction period, 12 ruminally cannulated lactating Holstein cows were selected and allocated into 2 groups at random, fed either a conventional diet [CON; n = 4; 40% concentrate, dry matter (DM) basis] or a high-grain diet (HG; n = 8; 60% concentrate, DM basis). After the SARA induction period, the RCT period began. The HG cows were randomly divided into 2 groups: the donor-recipient (DR) group and the self-recipient (SR) group, and their rumen contents were removed completely before RCT. For the DR group, cows received 70% rumen content from the CON cows, paired based on comparable body weight; for the SR group, each cow received 70% rumen content, self-derived. The results showed that nearly all rumen fermentation parameters returned to the normal levels that the cows had before SARA induction after 6 d of transplantation, regardless of RCT. The concentrations of acetate, valerate, and total volatile fatty acids (VFA) were not recovered in the SR cows, whereas all of them were recovered in the DR cows. The amplicon sequencing results indicated that both the SR and DR cows rebuild their rumen bacterial homeostasis quickly within 4 d after RCT, and the DR group showed a higher level of bacterial community diversity. At the genus level, the DR cows displayed an improved proportion of unclassified Ruminococcaceae and Saccharofermentans compared with the SR cows. Correlation analysis between the rumen bacteria and rumen fermentation suggested some potential relationships between the predominant transplantation-sensitive operational taxonomic units and VFA. Co-occurrence network analysis revealed that RCT affected only those rumen bacterial taxa that showed weak interactions with other taxa and did not affect the pivotal rumen bacteria with high levels of co-occurrence. Our findings indicate that RCT contributes to the restoration of rumen bacterial homeostasis and rumen fermentation in cows suffering from SARA without affecting the core microbiome.

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