| Literature DB >> 29776922 |
Eleni Mente1,2, Eleni Nikouli1, Efthimia Antonopoulou3, Samuel A M Martin2, Konstantinos A Kormas4.
Abstract
This study investigated the impact of different dietary ingredients, with different protein/lipid sources, on midgut and faeces bacteria community structures just before feeding and 3 h after feeding a single meal to individual rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Fish were kept in experimental rearing facilities and fed ad libitum twice daily for 5 weeks. Fish were fed three different commercial diets, which contained variations of high or low marine fishmeal/fish oil content. DNA was extracted from midgut and faeces samples for analysis of their bacterial 16S rRNA gene diversity by targeting the V3-V4 region with 454 pyrosequencing. A total of 332 unique bacterial operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were revealed in all samples. However, each sample was dominated (>80% relative abundance) by 2-14 OTUs, with the single most dominant OTU having >30% dominance, indicating that only a few bacteria were fundamental in terms of relative abundance in each treatment. Fifteen OTUs occurred in all samples (core microbiota). The majority of these OTUs belonged to the Proteobacteria, Firmicutes or Tenericutes, and were associated with other animal gut environments. The faecal material and the midgut samples had few overlaps in their shared OTUs. A postprandial response in the gut bacterial community structure 3 h after feeding highlights how dietary stimulation induces structural changes in the microbiota profiles in the established gut bacteria. This study showed that feeding O. mykiss different diets and even single meals lead to perturbations in the established gut bacteria of O. mykiss.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteria; Diet; Faeces; Gut; Oncorhynchus mykiss; Rainbow trout
Year: 2018 PMID: 29776922 PMCID: PMC6031335 DOI: 10.1242/bio.034397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Open ISSN: 2046-6390 Impact factor: 2.422
Cumulative bacterial sequence reads and OTUs in the midgut and faeces of
Fig. 1.Shared bacterial OTUs between the midguts (g) of % indicates the contribution of each compartment to the total number of OTUs per Venn diagram.
Fig. 2.The most abundant OTUs in the midgut (g) and faeces (f) of Red indicates a core OTU.
Fig. 3.Most abundant OTUs in reared
Fig. 4.Shared OTUs between the midgut (g), faeces (f) and composite feed of % indicates the contribution of each compartment to the total number or OTUs per Venn diagram.
Fig. 5.Midgut-faeces inconsistencies based on the ratio of the number of OTUs belonging to the three most abundant bacterial phyla found in Dark-coloured and light-coloured bars indicate gut and faecal samples respectively.
Fig. 6.Relative change in the abundance of the most abundant midgut OTUs of Numbers above each bar indicate the change in OTU ranking from 0 h → 3 h. * indicates a core OTU; ‘abs.’ indicates absent.