Sasson Goor, Kruger Ben-Shabat Sheerli, Seroussi Eyal, Doron-Faigenboim Adi, Shterzer Naama, Yaacoby Shamay, Berg Miller Margret E, White Bryan A, Halperin Eran, Mizrahi Itzhak
Department of Life Sciences and the National Institute for Biotechnology in the Negev, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Beer-Sheva, Israel.
Department of Ruminant Science, Institute of Animal Sciences, Agricultural Research Organization, Volcani Center, Bet Dagan, Israel.
mBio. 2017 Aug 15;8(4):e00703-17. doi: 10.1128/mBio.00703-17.
Ruminants sustain a long-lasting obligatory relationship with their rumen microbiome dating back 50 million years. In this unique host-microbiome relationship, the host's ability to digest its feed is completely dependent on its coevolved microbiome. This extraordinary alliance raises questions regarding the dependent relationship between ruminants' genetics and physiology and the rumen microbiome structure, composition, and metabolism. To elucidate this relationship, we examined the association of host genetics with the phylogenetic and functional composition of the rumen microbiome. We accomplished this by studying a population of 78 Holstein-Friesian dairy cows, using a combination of rumen microbiota data and other phenotypes from each animal with genotypic data from a subset of 47 animals. We identified 22 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) whose abundances were associated with rumen metabolic traits and host physiological traits and which showed measurable heritability. The abundance patterns of these microbes can explain high proportions of variance in rumen metabolism and many of the host physiological attributes such as its energy-harvesting efficiency. Interestingly, these OTUs shared higher phylogenetic similarity between themselves than expected by chance, suggesting occupation of a specific ecological niche within the rumen ecosystem. The findings presented here suggest that ruminant genetics and physiology are correlated with microbiome structure and that host genetics may shape the microbiome landscape by enriching for phylogenetically related taxa that may occupy a unique niche. Dairy cows are an essential nutritional source for the world's population; as such, they are extensively farmed throughout our planet and subsequently impact our environment. The microbial communities that reside in the upper digestive tract of these animals in a compartment named the rumen degrade and ferment the plant biomass that the animal ingests. Our recent efforts, as well as those of others, have shown that this microbial community's composition and functionality are tightly linked to the cow's capacity to harvest energy from its feed, as well as to other physiological traits. In this study, we identified microbial groups that are heritable and also linked to the cow's production parameters. This finding could potentially allow us to apply selection programs on specific rumen microbial components that are linked to the animal's physiology and beneficial to production. Hence, it is a steppingstone toward microbiome manipulation for increasing food availability while lowering environmental impacts such as methane emission.
反刍动物与它们的瘤胃微生物群维持着一种可追溯到5000万年前的长期必然关系。在这种独特的宿主 - 微生物群关系中,宿主消化其饲料的能力完全依赖于与其共同进化的微生物群。这种非凡的联盟引发了关于反刍动物的遗传学和生理学与瘤胃微生物群结构、组成及代谢之间依赖关系的问题。为了阐明这种关系,我们研究了宿主遗传学与瘤胃微生物群的系统发育和功能组成之间的关联。我们通过研究78头荷斯坦 - 弗里生奶牛群体来实现这一目标,使用了瘤胃微生物群数据以及每头动物的其他表型数据,并结合了47头动物子集的基因型数据。我们鉴定出22个操作分类单元(OTU),其丰度与瘤胃代谢特征和宿主生理特征相关,并且显示出可测量的遗传力。这些微生物的丰度模式可以解释瘤胃代谢中很大比例的方差以及许多宿主生理属性,如能量获取效率。有趣的是,这些OTU彼此之间的系统发育相似性高于随机预期,这表明它们在瘤胃生态系统中占据了特定的生态位。此处呈现的研究结果表明,反刍动物的遗传学和生理学与微生物群结构相关,并且宿主遗传学可能通过富集可能占据独特生态位的系统发育相关分类群来塑造微生物群格局。奶牛是全球人口重要的营养来源;因此,它们在全球广泛养殖,进而影响我们的环境。存在于这些动物上消化道一个名为瘤胃的隔室中的微生物群落会降解和发酵动物摄入的植物生物质。我们以及其他人最近的研究表明,这个微生物群落的组成和功能与奶牛从饲料中获取能量的能力以及其他生理特征紧密相连。在这项研究中,我们鉴定出了具有遗传性且与奶牛生产参数相关的微生物群体。这一发现可能使我们能够针对与动物生理学相关且对生产有益的特定瘤胃微生物成分应用选择程序。因此,这是朝着通过操纵微生物群来增加食物供应同时降低诸如甲烷排放等环境影响迈出的一步。