Abstract

The establishment of the intestinal microbiota is critical for the digestive and immune systems. We studied the early development of the rectal microbiota in horse, a hindgut fermenter, from birth until 7 days of age, by qPCR and 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. To evaluate initial sources of the foal microbiota, we characterised dam fecal, vaginal and oral microbiotas. We utilised an amplicon sequence variant (ASV) pipeline to maximise resolution and reproducibility. Stringent ASV filtering based on prevalence and abundance in samples and controls purged contaminants while preserving intestinal taxa. Sampled within 20 minutes after birth, rectal meconium contained small amounts of diverse bacterial DNA, with a profile closer to mare feces than mouth. 24 hours after birth, rectum was colonised by Firmicutes and Proteobacteria, some foals dominated by single genera. At day 7, the rectal genera were still different from adult feces. The mare vaginal microbiota contributed to 24 h and 7 day microbiotas. It contained few lactobacilli, with Corynebacterium, Porphyromonas, Campylobacter and Helcococcus as the most abundant genera. In the oral mucosa, Gemella was extremely abundant. Our observations indicate that bacteria or bacterial components are present in the intestine immediately after birth, but the newborn microbiota changes rapidly.

Highlights

  • The establishment of the intestinal microbiota is critical for the digestive and immune systems

  • For amplicon sequence variant (ASV) classified as typical intestinal genera, which are less likely reagent contaminants, only 0.179% of reads were removed across all samples, and 3.89% in the 0 h samples

  • We observed the early development of the equine rectal microbiota over the first week of postnatal life, starting from the moment of birth

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Summary

Introduction

The establishment of the intestinal microbiota is critical for the digestive and immune systems. We studied the early development of the rectal microbiota in horse, a hindgut fermenter, from birth until 7 days of age, by qPCR and 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing. In horse (Equus ferus caballus), the microbial fermentation occurs in the enlarged hindgut: colon and caecum[14,15] These compartments harbour extremely abundant and diverse microbiotas, the compositions of which are critical to the equine health[16]. Mild noninfectious “foal heat diarrhea” is common in neonatal foals during the first weeks[19] It is probably associated with the ongoing microbial colonisation of the gut and hypersecretion of the small intestinal mucosa.

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