Abstract

We first sought to evaluate the effect of dietary supplementation with the docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-rich microalgae, Aurantiochytrium limacinum (AURA), on rumen fermentation and the resistance of DHA to degradation and biohydrogenation by rumen microbes through ex vivo fermentation experiments. Subsequently, we sought to quantify the diet-derived DHA content of milk and the impact of AURA on microbial composition and metabolism in a pilot feeding trial with rumen-cannulated dairy cows. To achieve our aims, rumen fluid from cannulated cows was used as inoculum, and the effect of AURA inclusion on fermentation ex vivo was examined. At doses corresponding to the amount of AURA recommended for commercial production animals, only ~10% of DHA was degraded or biohydrogenated by rumen microorganisms. The results show that feeding with AURA had no effect on either total bacterial density or short-chain fatty acid production. Real-time quantitative PCR analysis of the rumen fluid samples collected during a seven-week in vivo trial revealed that microbes related to lactic acid metabolism and methanogenesis were significantly suppressed by the AURA-supplemented diet. The DHA concentration in milk increased over 25-fold with the AURA-supplemented diet and dropped by 30–40% within one week of washout. The addition of A. limacinum biomass to dairy cow diets resulted in positive effects on rumen microbial composition with no adverse effect on fermentation activity. AURA-derived DHA was stable, with only modest degradation in the rumen, and was successfully deposited in milk. This is the first study to investigate the effect of supplementing the diet of dairy cows with a protist-based biomass, namely, on important rumen fermentation parameters and on DHA deposition in milk, using a combination of ex vivo and in vivo approaches.

Highlights

  • We first sought to evaluate the effect of dietary supplementation with the docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-rich microalgae, Aurantiochytrium limacinum (AURA), on rumen fermentation and the resistance of DHA to degradation and biohydrogenation by rumen microbes through ex vivo fermentation experiments

  • To enable statistical comparisons between the different test product doses and time points, Tukey’s honestly significant difference (HSD) post hoc test was performed following an analysis of variance (ANOVA) of the ex vivo simulation data with the type I error rate set to α = 0.05

  • When we statistically analyzed the effects of the AURA test product on the rumen microbial parameters, we compared data from samples collected during the final week of each feeding period; in practice, we compared the means of data generated from samples collected on four consecutive days in weeks two, six (AURA diet), and seven

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Summary

Introduction

We first sought to evaluate the effect of dietary supplementation with the docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)-rich microalgae, Aurantiochytrium limacinum (AURA), on rumen fermentation and the resistance of DHA to degradation and biohydrogenation by rumen microbes through ex vivo fermentation experiments. AURA-derived DHA was stable, with only modest degradation in the rumen, and was successfully deposited in milk This is the first study to investigate the effect of supplementing the diet of dairy cows with a protist-based biomass, namely, on important rumen fermentation parameters and on DHA deposition in milk, using a combination of ex vivo and in vivo approaches. Food enrichment with long-chain omega-3 polyunsaturated fatty acids (LC-PUFAs) can serve as a strategy to prevent or reduce the economic and social burden of the aforementioned chronic diseases, while retaining the dietary benefits associated with macro- and micronutrients in ruminant meat and milk products and, importantly, without requiring changes to consumer eating habits [8,10]. Meta-analyses of clinical studies have published maps and institutional affiliations

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