Abstract

Due to modern management practices and the availability of energy dense feeds, obesity is a serious and increasingly common health problem for horses. Equine obesity is linked to insulin resistance and exacerbation of inflammatory issues such as osteoarthritis and laminitis. While the gut microbiome is thought to play a part in metabolic status in horses, bacterial communities associated with obesity have yet to be described. Here we report differences in metabolic factors in the blood of obese, normal and lean horses correlated with differences in gut microbiome composition. We report that obese horses had higher levels of leptin, triglycerides, glucose, and cortisol in their blood, and more diverse gut microbiome communities with higher relative abundance of Firmicutes, and lower numbers of Bacteroidetes and Actinobacteria. Network analyses of correlations between body condition, blood analytes, and microbial composition at the genus level revealed a more nuanced picture of microbe-host interactions, pointing to specific bacterial species and assemblages that may be signatures of obesity and leanness in the horse gut. In particular, bacteria groups positively associated with two blood analytes and obesity included Butyrivibrio spp., Prevotellaceae, Blautia spp., two members of Erysipelotrichaceae, and a Lachnospiraceae taxa. These results are an important first step in unraveling the metabolic differences between obese and lean horse gut communities, and designing targeted strategies for microbial intervention.

Highlights

  • As hindgut fermenting, obligate herbivores, horses rely on the gut microbiome to access nutrients and energy from dietary complex carbohydrates

  • This research compares the diversity and structure of gut microbiome communities of obese, lean, and normal horses, and correlates bacterial community assembly with blood analytes associated with obesity and metabolic issues in horses

  • The blood marker results mirror what has been shown in other studies [45, 47, 57], but this is the first report correlating BCS, blood analytes, and microbial community composition in horses

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Summary

Introduction

Obligate herbivores, horses rely on the gut microbiome to access nutrients and energy from dietary complex carbohydrates. As with other animal and human studies, the horse gut microbiome is sensitive to diet, consumption of starch [8,9,10,11], fiber [9, 12,13,14], and high fat [9, 15], or following a rapid change in diet [14, 16]. Both age [17] and exercise [18, 19] have been shown to impact the composition of the equine gut microbiome.

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