Zeitschriftenaufsatz
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2019
Effects of the supplementation of plant-based formulations on microbial fermentation and predicted metabolic function in vitro
Autor:in
Petri, Renée; Mickdam, Elsayed; Klevenhusen, Fenja; BEYER, B; Zebeli, Qendrim
Publikationen als Autor:in / Herausgeber:in der Vetmeduni
Journal
Abstrakt
This study aimed at testing the effects of three different formulations of feed supplements based on three different combinations of plant derived alkaloids, prebiotics, tannins, vitamins and minerals on rumen fermentation and the microbiome in vitro. A Rusitec experiment was conducted in 2 identical runs using a complete randomized design with 3 replicates per treatment resulting in total of 6 treatment combinations (n = 6). Each run lasted 12 d with sampling occurring in the last 5 d. Diets were a standard dairy ration (60:40; concentrate:forage) supplemented with one of 3 different plant-based combinations (PI, PII, and PIII) at a level of 100 mg/I and a non-supplemented control (basal diet, control). Microbial DNA samples were taken on the last day of each run and the 16S rRNA target gene sequenced using Illumina MiSeq technology. The supplementations had no effect on the pH, methane and carbon dioxide production. However, both total SCFA (P= 0.08) and molar concentrations of acetate (P= 0.06) tended to be increased in the treatment groups in comparison to control, with Pll having the highest overall values (102.7 mmol/L and 43.3 mmol/L, respectively). Alpha diversity indices Shannon, Simpson and Chaol showed no effect of supplementations or combinations. The addition of Pll increased the relative abundance of Bacteroidetes compared to all other treatments (P = 0.05). Supplementation with plantbased combinations reduced the relative abundance of Pyramidobacter from the family Dethiosulfovi-brionaceae in comparison with the control diet (P= 0.05). Evaluation of predicted gene function through PICRUSt analysis showed variation in predicted cellular function and metabolism between bacterial communities supplemented with plant-based combinations compared to the control diet. This shows that the addition of plant-based combinations can have the potential to modulate the metabolic function of rumen microbes, and likely the production of small-sized rumen metabolites, without disrupting the rumen microbial community structure and diversity. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Schlagwörter
Plant alkaloids; Rumen; In vitro; 16S rRNA; PiCRUSt
Dokumententyp
Originalarbeit
ISSN/eISSN
1075-9964 - 1095-8274
WoS ID
PubMed ID