Abstract
BackgroundThe microbiota of an animal's intestinal tract plays important roles in the animal's overall health, productivity and well-being. There is still a scarcity of information on the microbial diversity in the gut of livestock species such as cattle. The primary reason for this lack of data relates to the expense of methods needed to generate such data. Here we have utilized a bacterial tag-encoded FLX 16s rDNA amplicon pyrosequencing (bTEFAP) approach that is able to perform diversity analyses of gastrointestinal populations. bTEFAP is relatively inexpensive in terms of both time and labor due to the implementation of a novel tag priming method and an efficient bioinformatics pipeline. We have evaluated the microbiome from the feces of 20 commercial, lactating dairy cows.ResultsUbiquitous bacteria detected from the cattle feces included Clostridium, Bacteroides, Porpyhyromonas, Ruminococcus, Alistipes, Lachnospiraceae, Prevotella, Lachnospira, Enterococcus, Oscillospira, Cytophage, Anaerotruncus, and Acidaminococcus spp. Foodborne pathogenic bacteria were detected in several of the cattle, a total of 4 cows were found to be positive for Salmonella spp (tentative enterica) and 6 cows were positive for Campylobacter spp. (tentative lanienae).ConclusionUsing bTEFAP we have examined the microbiota in the feces of cattle. As these methods continue to mature we will better understand the ecology of the major populations of bacteria the lower intestinal tract. This in turn will allow for a better understanding of ways in which the intestinal microbiome contributes to animal health, productivity and wellbeing.
Highlights
The microbiota of an animal's intestinal tract plays important roles in the animal's overall health, productivity and well-being
Culture based methods are extremely biased in their evaluation of microbial diversity, tending to overestimate the importance of bacterial species such as Escherichia coli that grow on an agar surface
Recent research related to host physiology and the gastrointestinal bacterial populations have sparked a renewed interest in understanding the gut microbiome [26,27]
Summary
The microbiota of an animal's intestinal tract plays important roles in the animal's overall health, productivity and well-being. BMC Microbiology 2008, 8:125 http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2180/8/125 diverse and numerous; intestinal populations often exceed 1011 CFU/gram feces [1,2] The majority of these bacteria are vital to the maintenance of animal's health and it is expected that even minor perturbations in these populations may cause dramatic shifts that can affect livestock productivity [3,4,5]. These beneficial health effects relate to the ability of these intestinal bacterial populations to supply vital nutrients, convert metabolites and beneficially interact with host cells [6,7,8]. Culture based methods are extremely biased in their evaluation of microbial diversity, tending to overestimate the importance of bacterial species such as Escherichia coli that grow on an agar surface
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