| Literature DB >> 29686799 |
Susanna K P Lau1,2,3,4,5, Jade L L Teng1,2,3,4, Tsz Ho Chiu2, Elaine Chan2, Alan K L Tsang2, Gianni Panagiotou6,7, Shao-Lun Zhai8, Patrick C Y Woo1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
In Hong Kong, cattle were traditionally raised by farmers as draft animals to plough rice fields. Due to urbanization in the 20th century, they were gradually abandoned and became wild cattle straying in suburban Hong Kong. Recently, these cattle were observed to have become omnivorous by eating leftover barbeque food waste in country parks. Microbiome analysis was performed on fecal samples of the omnivorous cattle using deep sequencing and the resulting microbiome was compared with that of traditional herbivorous cattle in Southern China. A more diverse gut microbiome was observed in the omnivorous cattle, suggesting that microbiota diversity increases as diet variation increases. At the genus level, the relative abundance of Anaeroplasma, Anaerovorax, Bacillus, Coprobacillus and Solibacillus significantly increased and those of Anaerofustis, Butyricimonas, Campylobacter, Coprococcus, Dehalobacterium, Phascolarctobacterium, rc4.4, RFN20, Succinivibrio and Turicibacter significantly decreased in the omnivorous group. The increase in microbial community levels of Bacillus and Anaerovorax likely attributes to the inclusion of meat in the diet; while the decrease in relative abundance of Coprococcus, Butyricimonas, Succinivibrio, Campylobacter and Phascolarctobacterium may reflect the reduction in grass intake. Furthermore, an increased consumption of resistant starch likely resulted in the increase in abundance of Anaeroplasma. In conclusion, a significant change in the gut microbial community was observed in the omnivorous cattle, suggesting that diet may be one of the factors that may signal an adaptation response by the cattle to maintain feed efficiency as a consequence of the change in environment.Entities:
Keywords: Cattle; Diet; Microbial diversity; Microbiome; Omnivore
Year: 2018 PMID: 29686799 PMCID: PMC5910514 DOI: 10.1016/j.csbj.2018.02.004
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Comput Struct Biotechnol J ISSN: 2001-0370 Impact factor: 7.271
Characteristics and diet of cattle sampled in this study.
| Dietary group | ||
|---|---|---|
| Mixed | Grass | |
| Number of cattle sampled | 10 | 10 |
| Breed | ||
| Age | Adult | Adult |
| Status | Healthy | Healthy |
| Location | Sai Kung Country Park, Hong Kong | Free-grazing farm, Guangzhou, China |
| Diet composition | Forage and barbeque food waste (omnivorous) | Forage only (herbivorous) |
| Number of sample taken | 1 fecal sample per cow | 1 fecal sample per cow |
Mixed, Group M; grass, Group G.
Fig. 1Photos of omnivorous cattle consuming food waste from a barbeque site at Sai Kung Country Park. (A) Cow eating raw sausages, (B) cow eating leftover cooked sweet potato, (C) cow eating a piece of beef steak, and (D) cow licking honey from the jar.
Fig. 2Relative abundance of bacteria composition across the two dietary groups at (A) phylum, (B) family and (C) genus levels. “Others” includes all phyla or genera with <0.1% relative abundance. Mixed, Group M; grass, Group G.
Fig. 3Alpha diversity of fecal samples across the two dietary groups represented by relative changes of rarefaction depth in terms of (A) number of observed OTUs, (B) Shannon index (diversity) and (C) Chao1 (richness). Mixed, blue square, Group M; grass, red diamond, Group G.
Fig. 4Principal component analysis (PCA) of fecal samples across the two dietary groups based on community structure in terms of the number of OTUs present. Each symbol represented one gut microbiota. Confidence intervals for eclipses around group centroids are 95%. Mixed, blue squares, Group M; grass, red circles, Group G.
Fig. 5The effects of dietary differences on the community structure at genus level. Only taxa with significant difference are displayed and pair-wise comparisons were performed by Student's t-test (*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001). Error bars represent standard error. Mixed, blue, Group M; grass, red, Group G.