Jiang Tieshan, Mandal Rabindra K, Wideman Robert F, Khatiwara Anita, Pevzner Igal, Min Kwon Young
Department of Poultry Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States of America.
Department of Poultry Science, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States of America; Cell and Molecular Biology Program, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Apr 16;10(4):e0124403. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0124403. eCollection 2015.
Bacterial chondronecrosis with osteomyelitis (BCO) is recognized as an important cause of lameness in commercial broiler chickens (meat-type chickens). Relatively little is known about the microbial communities associated with BCO. This study was conducted to increase our understanding of the microbial factors associated with BCO using a culture-independent approach. Using Illumina sequencing of the hyper-variable region V6 in the 16S rRNA gene, we characterized the bacterial communities in 97 femoral or tibial heads from normal and lame broilers carefully selected to represent diverse variations in age, line, lesion type, floor type, clinical status and bone type. Our in-depth survey based on 14 million assembled sequence reads revealed that complex bacterial communities exist in all samples, including macroscopically normal bones from clinically healthy birds. Overall, Proteobacteria (mean 90.9%) comprised the most common phylum, followed by Firmicutes (6.1%) and Actinobacteria (2.6%), accounting for more than 99% of all reads. Statistical analyses demonstrated that there are differences in bacterial communities in different types of bones (femur vs. tibia), lesion types (macroscopically normal femora or tibiae vs. those with pathognomonic BCO lesions), and among individual birds. This analysis also showed that BCO samples overrepresented genera Staphylococcus, whose species have been frequently isolated in BCO samples in previous studies. Rarefaction analysis demonstrated the general tendency that increased severities of BCO lesions were associated with reduced species diversity in both femoral and tibial samples when compared to macroscopically normal samples. These observations suggest that certain bacterial subgroups are preferentially selected in association with the development of BCO lesions. Understanding the microbial species associated with BCO will identify opportunities for understanding and modulating the pathogenesis of this form of lameness in broilers.
细菌性软骨坏死伴骨髓炎(BCO)被认为是商品肉鸡(肉用型鸡)跛行的一个重要原因。关于与BCO相关的微生物群落,人们了解相对较少。本研究采用非培养方法,以增进我们对与BCO相关的微生物因素的理解。通过对16S rRNA基因高变区V6进行Illumina测序,我们对97个来自正常和跛行肉鸡的股骨头或胫骨头的细菌群落进行了特征分析,这些样本经过精心挑选,以代表年龄、品系、病变类型、饲养地面类型、临床状态和骨类型的多样变化。基于1400万个组装序列读数的深入调查显示,所有样本中都存在复杂的细菌群落,包括临床健康鸡的宏观正常骨骼。总体而言,变形菌门(平均90.9%)是最常见的门类,其次是厚壁菌门(6.1%)和放线菌门(2.6%),占所有读数的99%以上。统计分析表明,不同类型的骨骼(股骨与胫骨)、病变类型(宏观正常的股骨或胫骨与具有典型BCO病变的股骨或胫骨)以及个体鸡之间的细菌群落存在差异。该分析还表明,BCO样本中葡萄球菌属的比例过高,其物种在先前研究的BCO样本中经常被分离出来。稀疏分析表明,与宏观正常样本相比,BCO病变严重程度增加时,股骨和胫骨样本中的物种多样性通常会降低。这些观察结果表明,某些细菌亚群在BCO病变发展过程中被优先选择。了解与BCO相关的微生物物种将为理解和调节肉鸡这种跛行形式的发病机制提供机会。