Abstract

The aim of this work was to evaluate the effect of feeding management during the first month of life (natural with the mother, NAT, or artificial with milk replacer, ART) on the rumen microbial colonization and the host innate immune response. Thirty pregnant goats carrying two fetuses were used. At birth one kid was taken immediately away from the doe and fed milk replacer (ART) while the other remained with the mother (NAT). Kids from groups received colostrum during first 2 days of life. Groups of four kids (from ART and NAT experimental groups) were slaughtered at 1, 3, 7, 14, 21 and 28 days of life. On the sampling day, after slaughtering, the rumen content was sampled and epithelial rumen tissue was collected. Pyrosequencing analyses of the bacterial community structure on samples collected at 3, 7, 14 and 28 days showed that both systems promoted significantly different colonization patterns (P = 0.001). Diversity indices increased with age and were higher in NAT feeding system. Lower mRNA abundance was detected in TLR2, TLR8 and TLR10 in days 3 and 5 compared to the other days (7, 14, 21 and 28). Only TLR5 showed a significantly different level of expression according to the feeding system, presenting higher mRNA abundances in ART kids. PGLYRP1 showed significantly higher abundance levels in days 3, 5 and 7, and then experienced a decline independently of the feeding system. These observations confirmed a highly diverse microbial colonisation from the first day of life in the undeveloped rumen, and show that the colonization pattern substantially differs between pre-ruminants reared under natural or artificial milk feeding systems. However, the rumen epithelial immune development does not differentially respond to distinct microbial colonization patterns.

Highlights

  • Ruminants harbor a complex and diverse microbial ecosystem in their rumen that allows them to covert digested plant material into edible high nutritive quality products [1]

  • TLR5 showed a significantly different level of expression according to the feeding system, presenting higher mRNA abundances in ART kids

  • Our results suggest that variations in bacterial population with time may represent variations in bacterial ligands which could play an important role in modulating Toll-like receptors (TLRs) expression and innate mucosal immune responses

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Summary

Introduction

Ruminants harbor a complex and diverse microbial ecosystem in their rumen that allows them to covert digested plant material into edible high nutritive quality products (meat and milk) [1]. The window of time in which the ecosystem is most sensitive to alteration is yet unknown and describing the sequential colonization in different feeding systems could help to design efficient intervention strategies to manipulate rumen microbial colonization in early life. Newborns are typically separated from the dam after birth and fed either milk replacer or whole milk; in contrast, in meat and extensive production systems, the offspring remains with the dam until weaning. These two systems imply differences in regards to milk type (whole milk vs milk replacer) and presence/absence of older companion, which can not be addressed separately

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