Abstract

Growth retardation reduces the incomes of livestock farming. However, effective nutritional interventions to promote compensatory growth and the mechanisms involving digestive tract microbiomes and transcripts have yet to be elucidated. In this study, Qinghai plateau yaks, which frequently suffer from growth retardation due to malnutrition, were used as an experimental model. Young growth-retarded yaks were pastured (GRP), fed basal ration (GRB), fed basal ration addition cysteamine hydrochloride (CSH; GRBC) or active dry yeast (ADY; GRBY). Another group of growth normal yak was pastured as a positive control (GNP). After 60-day nutritional interventions, the results showed that the average daily gain (ADG) of GRB was similar to the level of GNP, and the growth rates of GRBC and GRBY were significantly higher than the level of GNP (P < 0.05). Basal rations addition of CSH or ADY either improved the serum biochemical indexes, decreased serum LPS concentration, facilitated ruminal epithelium development and volatile fatty acids (VFA) fermentation of growth-retarded yaks. Comparative transcriptome in rumen epithelium between growth-retarded and normal yaks identified the differentially expressed genes mainly enriched in immune system, digestive system, extracellular matrix and cell adhesion pathways. CSH addition and ADY addition in basal rations upregulated ruminal VFA absorption (SLC26A3, PAT1, MCT1) and cell junction (CLDN1, CDH1, OCLN) gene expression, and downregulated complement system (C2, C7) gene expression in the growth-retarded yaks. 16S rDNA results showed that CSH addition and ADY addition in basal rations increased the rumen beneficial bacterial populations (Prevotella_1, Butyrivibrio_2, Fibrobacter) of growth-retarded yaks. The correlation analysis identified that ruminal VFAs and beneficial bacteria abundance were significantly positively correlated with cell junction and VFA absorption gene expressions and negatively correlated with complement system gene expressions on the ruminal epithelium. Therefore, CSH addition and ADY addition in basal rations promoted rumen health and body growth of growth-retarded yaks, of which basal ration addition of ADY had the optimal growth-promoting effects. These results suggested that improving nutrition and probiotics addition is a more effective method to improve growth retardation caused by gastrointestinal function deficiencies.

Highlights

  • Yaks (Bos grunniens) are an ancient bovine mainly distributed on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau at high altitudes from 3000 to 5400 m

  • Age, forage nutrition and environmental conditions, the lower Average Daily Gain (ADG) (41.3% of the GNP group), serum glucose and total protein concentrations and ruminal papillae height of the GRP group compared to the GNP group suggested the lower nutrition intake or efficiency of nutrient absorption in growth-retarded yaks

  • Feeding basal ration did not decrease the serum LPS concentrations. These results indicated that only nutritional improvement cannot significantly improve the ruminal healthy development and nutrient absorption efficiency of growth-retarded yaks

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Summary

Introduction

Yaks (Bos grunniens) are an ancient bovine mainly distributed on the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau at high altitudes from 3000 to 5400 m. The Qinghai-Tibet Plateau climate is sharp frost in the long-term cold season from October to May (average temperature −5∼ −15◦C). Forage is extremely scarce for yaks because the grass is withered and snow-covered in the cold season. Because of yaks’ seasonal reproduction characteristics (mating during June to October and delivery during May to September of the year after a 265-day gestation period), most of the gestation and neonatal periods of yaks occur in the cold season. Growth-retarded yaks widely exist on the plateau grassland, and their low body weight, high morbidity and mortality decrease their farming economic efficiency

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