Journal of thermal biology | 2021

Heat stress influence the microbiota and organic acids concentration in beef cattle rumen.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The objective of this study was to evaluate the effect of heat stress on meta-taxonomic and metabolic profiles of prokaryotes in beef cattle rumen. Six pure-breed Nellore heifers with ruminal cannulas were used in the study. Six treatments were tested in a 6\xa0×\xa06 Latin Square with six periods of 21days. The treatments were evaluated in a 2\xa0×\xa02\xa0+\xa02 factorial arrangement, consisting of 4 combinations: two temperatures conditions (thermoneutral, TN: 24\xa0°C; and heat stress, HS: 34\xa0°C) and two dietary energy concentration [low-energy (37% non-fibrous carbohydrates - NFC, 12\xa0Mcal of metabolizable energy per kg of dry matter) or high-energy concentration (50.5% NFC, 18.49\xa0Mcal of metabolizable energy per kg of dry matter)] plus two additional treatments with animals maintained in TN conditions but with your intake restricted (TN-RI) to the same of the heifers in HS with the two dietary energy concentration. The meta-genome was sequenced by MiSeq Sequencing System platform, and the DNA sequences were analysed using Geneious 10.2.3 software. The metabolic profile was evaluated by liquid and gas chromatography. Animals under HS presented lower (P\xa0=\xa00.04) prokaryote richness than animals under TN conditions. The genera Flavonifractor (1.4%), Treponema (0.6%) and Ruminococcus (0.9%) showed the lowest (P\xa0<\xa00.04) and Carnobacterium (7.7%) the highest (P\xa0=\xa00.02) relative abundance when the animals were submitted to HS, in relation to animals in TN. A total of 49 different metabolites were identified in the ruminal samples. The concentration of isobutyric acid (4.32\xa0mM) was highest in bovine rumen under HS conditions. Heat stress influenced the microbiota and concentration of some organic acids in beef cattle rumen. There was a reduction in the richness of rumen in cattle under heat stress, but the diversity of prokaryotes was not affected.

Volume 97
Pages \n 102897\n
DOI 10.1016/j.jtherbio.2021.102897
Language English
Journal Journal of thermal biology

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