Abstract

Urea is an inexpensive non-protein nitrogen source commonly supplemented to the diets of ruminants. It is cleaved to ammonia by bacterial ureases, which require Ni as a catalyst for ureolysis. The key event in the changes of the ruminal microbiome after urea supplementation remains unknown. We have therefore investigated changes in the ruminal microbiome and its community with Ni-dependent enzyme genes following urea supplementation and analyzed the associations of rumen environmental factors, including fermentation variables and Ni concentrations, with the compositional and functional changes of these communities. We found that urea supplementation increased urease activity and the concentrations of ammonia and Ni, and tended to increase concentrations of short chain fatty acids and acetate, whereas it decreased rumen pH and the L-/D-lactate ratio. With standards for genome completeness >60% and strain heterogeneity <10%, 20 bacterial species containing five Ni-dependent enzyme genes were detected in the metagenome sequences. For the five Ni-dependent enzyme genes, urea supplementation increased the relative abundances of genes of urease and acetyl-CoA synthase, whereas it decreased the relative abundances of genes of glyoxalase I, [NiFe]-hydrogenase, and lactate racemase. For the 20 microbes with Ni-dependent enzyme genes, urea supplementation increased the relative abundances of five bacteria exhibiting high capacities for the utilization of hemicellulose and pectin for butyrate and fatty acid biosynthesis. For the ruminal microbiome, urea supplementation increased the metagenomic capacities for hemicellulose and pectin degradation, butyrate generation, fatty acid biosynthesis, and carbon fixation, whereas it decreased the metagenomic capacities for starch degradation, propionate generation, and sulfur and nitrogen metabolism. Constrained correspondence analysis identified rumen ammonia and Ni concentrations as likely driving factors in the reshaping of the ruminal microbiome and, together with pH, of the community of microbes with Ni-dependent enzyme genes. Thus, the functional change of the latter community is probably an important event in the adaptation of the ruminal microbiome to urea-supplemented diets. This result provides a new perspective for the understanding of the effects of urea supplementation on rumen fermentation.

Highlights

  • Ruminants carry a characteristic microbiome in their rumen which is primarily influenced by ruminant species and diet

  • Compared with the values of the true proteins (TP) group, the rumen ammonia concentration, Ni concentration, and urease activity were significantly increased, whereas the rumen pH and the ratio of L-lactate to D-lactate were significantly decreased in the US group (Table 2)

  • Special focus was on the relevance of microbial changes for fermentation processes and, vice versa, a possible feed-back impact of fermentation-driven environmental variables on the ruminal microbiome

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Ruminants carry a characteristic microbiome in their rumen which is primarily influenced by ruminant species and diet. Ureolysis has functional implications for nitrogen recycling and microbial protein synthesis with expectable effects on a wide range of other metabolic processes in the rumen (Patra and Aschenbach, 2018). The usability of urea for de novo synthesis of microbial protein makes urea an inexpensive non-protein nitrogen source that is commonly supplemented to the diets of ruminants to improve the ruminal nitrogen balance. Studies have shown that urea supplementation alters the diversity and structure of the ruminal microbiome but has almost no impacts on the abundance of ureolytic bacteria when compared with animals fed diets without urea supplementation (Jin et al, 2017). The question as to how the dietary supplementation of urea reshapes the structure of the ruminal microbiome without impacting on the composition and abundance of ureolytic bacteria remains open

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.