| Literature DB >> 30333981 |
Wakako Ikeda-Ohtsubo1, Sylvia Brugman2, Craig H Warden3, Johanna M J Rebel4, Gert Folkerts5, Corné M J Pieterse6.
Abstract
All multicellular organisms benefit from their own microbiota, which play important roles in maintaining the host nutritional health and immunity. Recently, the number of studies on the microbiota of animals, fish, and plants of economic importance is rapidly expanding and there are increasing expectations that productivity and sustainability in agricultural management can be improved by microbiota manipulation. However, optimizing microbiota is still a challenging task because of the lack of knowledge on the dominant microorganisms or significant variations between microbiota, reflecting sampling biases, different agricultural management as well as breeding backgrounds. To offer a more generalized view on microbiota in agriculture, which can be used for defining criteria of "optimal microbiota" as the goal of manipulation, we summarize here current knowledge on microbiota on animals, fish, and plants with emphasis on bacterial community structure and metabolic functions, and how microbiota can be affected by domestication, conventional agricultural practices, and use of antimicrobial agents. Finally, we discuss future tasks for defining "optimal microbiota," which can improve host growth, nutrition, and immunity and reduce the use of antimicrobial agents in agriculture.Entities:
Keywords: agricultural immunology; agriculture; animal husbandry; aquaculture; microbiota; phyllosphere; rhizosphere
Year: 2018 PMID: 30333981 PMCID: PMC6176000 DOI: 10.3389/fnut.2018.00090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Nutr ISSN: 2296-861X
Figure 1Microbiota in agriculture. The figure provides an overview of the bacterial composition of the microbiota of different parts of livestock animals, gill and intestines of fish, and phyllosphere and rhizosphere of plants at the phylum-level (pie-charts) and lower taxonomic levels. The data sources are 16S rRNA or metagenomic analyses of intestinal samples from pigs (14, 15), cattle (3, 16), chicken (17), Atlantic salmon (18), grass carp (19), gill and mucosal samples from rainbow trout (20), leaf samples from lettuce (21), leaf and rhizosphere samples from soybean (22, 23), root and rhizosphere samples from maize (24), rice (25, 26).
Important microbial metabolites and their effects on host animals, fish, and plants.
| Short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) | Butyrate | A, F | Energy homeostasis anti-inflammatory effect, improve intestinal barrier | Mucosal disruption |
| Propionate | Neurotoxicity | |||
| Organic acids | Lactate | A, F, | Increase butyrate production | Acidosis, inflammation, neurotoxicity, |
| Succinate | A, F, P | Glycemic control, feed PGPM, mineral solubilization | Feed pathogens | |
| Ammonia and amino acid derivatives | Ammonia, ammonium | A, F, P | Nitrogen nutritional source, pH neutralization | Inflammation, mucosal damages, increase oxidative stress |
| Biogenic amines | A, F | Synthesis of neurotransmitter (serotonin) | Production of uremic toxins, carcinogenesis | |
| Signaling molecules acting on the host | IAA, 2,4-DAPG, GABA | A, F, P | Growth promotion, anti-inflammation | |
| Signaling molecules acting on other microbes | AHL, AI-2 | Maintenance of microbial structure (e.g., biofilm formation), cell-to-cell communication between microbes | ||
| Antimicrobial compounds | Bacteriocins, RiPPs | A, F, P | Defense against pathogens, immunomodulatory effects | Cytotoxicity |
| Vitamins | Vitamin B12, vitamin K, D | A, F | Provisioning of host nutrition, immunomodulation | |
| Microbial cellular components | LPS, Polysaccharide A | A, F, P | Immunomodulation, maintenance of intestinal homeostasis | Inflammation |
A, animals; F, fish; P, plants.