Abstract

BackgroundVariation of microorganism communities in the rumen of cattle (Bos taurus) is of great interest because of possible links to economically or environmentally important traits, such as feed conversion efficiency or methane emission levels. The resolution of studies investigating this variation may be improved by utilizing untargeted massively parallel sequencing (MPS), that is, sequencing without targeted amplification of genes. The objective of this study was to develop a method which used MPS to generate “rumen metagenome profiles”, and to investigate if these profiles were repeatable among samples taken from the same cow. Given faecal samples are much easier to obtain than rumen fluid samples; we also investigated whether rumen metagenome profiles were predictive of faecal metagenome profiles.ResultsRather than focusing on individual organisms within the rumen, our method used MPS data to generate quantitative rumen micro-biome profiles, regardless of taxonomic classifications. The method requires a previously assembled reference metagenome. A number of such reference metagenomes were considered, including two rumen derived metagenomes, a human faecal microflora metagenome and a reference metagenome made up of publically available prokaryote sequences. Sequence reads from each test sample were aligned to these references. The “rumen metagenome profile” was generated from the number of the reads that aligned to each contig in the database. We used this method to test the hypothesis that rumen fluid microbial community profiles vary more between cows than within multiple samples from the same cow. Rumen fluid samples were taken from three cows, at three locations within the rumen. DNA from the samples was sequenced on the Illumina GAIIx. When the reads were aligned to a rumen metagenome reference, the rumen metagenome profiles were repeatable (P < 0.00001) by cow regardless of location of sampling rumen fluid. The repeatability was estimated at 9%, albeit with a high standard error, reflecting the small number of animals in the study. Finally, we compared rumen microbial profiles to faecal microbial profiles. Our hypothesis, that there would be a stronger correlation between faeces and rumen fluid from the same cow than between faeces and rumen fluid from different cows, was not supported by our data (with much greater significance of rumen versus faeces effect than animal effect in mixed linear model).ConclusionsWe have presented a simple and high throughput method of metagenome profiling to assess the similarity of whole metagenomes, and illustrated its use on two novel datasets. This method utilises widely used freeware. The method should be useful in the exploration and comparison of metagenomes.

Highlights

  • Variation of microorganism communities in the rumen of cattle (Bos taurus) is of great interest because of possible links to economically or environmentally important traits, such as feed conversion efficiency or methane emission levels

  • In order to meet this challenge, methods for profiling the rumen microbial population should meet two criteria 1) they should be relatively low cost, so large numbers of individuals can be profiled for testing associations with the above traits, and 2) they should be repeatable, e.g. similar profiles are generated for the same cow, sheep or goat when two repeat samples are taken at the same time

  • The gut derived references included two independent rumen massively parallel sequencing (MPS) contig databases, the first of which was assembled from MPS of bovine and ovine (Ovis aries) rumen samples (DPI_rumen), the second was a independently sequenced database (JGI_rumen) which was obtained from Hess et al [6] and comprised contigs derived from MPS of microbes attached to bovine rumen fibre

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Summary

Introduction

Variation of microorganism communities in the rumen of cattle (Bos taurus) is of great interest because of possible links to economically or environmentally important traits, such as feed conversion efficiency or methane emission levels. Many studies have investigated the symbiotic microorganisms in the rumen because of their link to economically or environmentally important traits such as feed conversion efficiency [2,3], methane production [4,5], and more recently discovery of microbes and enzymes that enable fermentation of biomass for biofuel production [6]. In order to meet this challenge, methods for profiling the rumen microbial population should meet two criteria 1) they should be relatively low cost, so large numbers of individuals can be profiled for testing associations with the above traits, and 2) they should be repeatable, e.g. similar profiles are generated for the same cow, sheep or goat when two repeat samples are taken at the same time

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