Abstract

Recent work characterized the chicken reproductive tract (oviduct) microbiome composition and its similarity to the egg and chick microbiomes. However, the origin of the oviduct microbiome has not been addressed yet. Here, we characterized the microbiome composition along the oviduct (infundibulum, magnum, and shell gland) as well as in the gut (jejunum and cecum) of broiler breeders at 37 weeks of age of the Cobb industrial breed. We found that while the microbiome composition along the oviduct is similar, the three sites, jejunum, cecum, and oviduct hold distinct microbiomes. However, there was also a large overlap in the composition of the gut and oviduct microbiomes, with 55 and 53% of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) representing 96 and 90% of the total abundance in the jejunum and cecum, respectively, shared with the magnum. Furthermore, we identified a strong correlation between the relative abundance of ASVs in the gut and their probability to be found in the oviduct. These results suggest that material from the gut travels the full length of the oviduct. This is possibly the result of chicken physiology which includes the cloaca, a cavity to which both the intestinal and reproductive tracts open into. As the cloaca is common to birds, reptiles, amphibians, most fish, and monotremes, our finding may be relevant to many vertebrates. Importantly, these results indicate that mere presence in, and ascending of the oviduct are not virulence characteristics specific to pathogens, as commonly thought, but are the result of chicken physiology and characterize all gut bacteria. Furthermore, whereas a vertical transmission route from the hen to the chick has been suggested, our work starts laying a mechanistic foundation to this route, by describing the movement of gut bacteria to the oviduct, where they may be enclosed in the developing egg. Last, as our results show that gut material travels the full length of the oviduct, fertilization in poultry occurs in the presence of at least bacterial products if not live bacteria, and therefore food additives, probiotics, and diet possibly have a much more direct effect on reproduction and egg formation than previously considered.

Highlights

  • MATERIALS AND METHODSEfficient transfer to host progeny is crucial for the evolutionary success of gut commensals and pathogens

  • Efficient vertical transmission of gut commensals to progeny is imperative for the rapid development of progeny microbiota and the evolutionary success of the host, as the microbiota affects host development, its ability to utilize plant-derived carbohydrates, and protects the host from gut pathogens (Józefiak et al, 2004; Sommer and Bäckhed, 2013; Oakley et al, 2014)

  • We found a large overlap in the composition of the oviduct and intestinal microbiomes, and that the relative abundance of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) in the gut correlates with the probability that they will be present in the oviduct

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Summary

MATERIALS AND METHODS

Efficient transfer to host progeny is crucial for the evolutionary success of gut commensals and pathogens. Lee et al used 16S rDNA analysis to examine the composition of the oviduct microbiome and compare it to that of the hen’s cloaca, descendent egg shell and egg white, and 18-day old embryo cecum of egg-laying Korean commercial breed hens (Lee et al, 2019) They showed a correlation between the microbiomes at the different sites, establishing a possible connection between the maternal oviduct and chick gut microbiomes. We found a large overlap in the composition of the oviduct and intestinal microbiomes, and that the relative abundance of amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) in the gut correlates with the probability that they will be present in the oviduct. A best fit semi-log nonlinear regression was identified, and Spearman correlation was calculated using GraphPad Prism version 5.03 (GraphPad Software, San Diego California USA, www.graphpad.com)

RESULTS
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ETHICS STATEMENT
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