Mariadassou Mahendra, Nouvel Laurent X, Constant Fabienne, Morgavi Diego P, Rault Lucie, Barbey Sarah, Helloin Emmanuelle, Rué Olivier, Schbath Sophie, Launay Frederic, Sandra Olivier, Lefebvre Rachel, Le Loir Yves, Germon Pierre, Citti Christine, Even Sergine
Université Paris-Saclay, INRAE, MaIAGE, Jouy-en-Josas, France.
IHAP, Université de Toulouse, INRAE, ENVT, Toulouse, France.
Anim Microbiome. 2023 Jun 12;5(1):32. doi: 10.1186/s42523-023-00252-w.
Host-associated microbes are major determinants of the host phenotypes. In the present study, we used dairy cows with different scores of susceptibility to mastitis with the aim to explore the relationships between microbiota composition and different factors in various body sites throughout lactation as well as the intra- and inter-animal microbial sharing.
Microbiotas from the mouth, nose, vagina and milk of 45 lactating dairy cows were characterized by metataxonomics at four time points during the first lactation, from 1-week pre-partum to 7 months post-partum. Each site harbored a specific community that changed with time, likely reflecting physiological changes in the transition period and changes in diet and housing. Importantly, we found a significant number of microbes shared among different anatomical sites within each animal. This was between nearby anatomic sites, with up to 32% of the total number of Amplicon Sequence Variants (ASVs) of the oral microbiota shared with the nasal microbiota but also between distant ones (e.g. milk with nasal and vaginal microbiotas). In contrast, the share of microbes between animals was limited (< 7% of ASVs shared by more than 50% of the herd for a given site and time point). The latter widely shared ASVs were mainly found in the oral and nasal microbiotas. These results thus indicate that despite a common environment and diet, each animal hosted a specific set of bacteria, supporting a tight interplay between each animal and its microbiota. The score of susceptibility to mastitis was slightly but significantly related to the microbiota associated to milk suggesting a link between host genetics and microbiota.
This work highlights an important sharing of microbes between relevant microbiotas involved in health and production at the animal level, whereas the presence of common microbes was limited between animals of the herd. This suggests a host regulation of body-associated microbiotas that seems to be differently expressed depending on the body site, as suggested by changes in the milk microbiota that were associated to genotypes of susceptibility to mastitis.
宿主相关微生物是宿主表型的主要决定因素。在本研究中,我们使用了对乳腺炎易感性评分不同的奶牛,旨在探讨整个泌乳期不同身体部位的微生物群组成与不同因素之间的关系,以及动物个体内和个体间的微生物共享情况。
在首次泌乳期间的四个时间点(从产前1周到产后7个月),通过宏分类学对45头泌乳奶牛的口腔、鼻腔、阴道和乳汁中的微生物群进行了表征。每个部位都有一个随时间变化的特定群落,这可能反映了过渡期的生理变化以及饮食和饲养环境的变化。重要的是,我们发现每头动物的不同解剖部位之间存在大量共享微生物。这既存在于相邻的解剖部位之间,例如口腔微生物群中高达32%的扩增子序列变体(ASV)总数与鼻腔微生物群共享,也存在于距离较远的部位之间(例如乳汁与鼻腔和阴道微生物群)。相比之下,动物个体之间的微生物共享有限(在给定部位和时间点,超过50%的牛群共享的ASV不到7%)。后者广泛共享的ASV主要存在于口腔和鼻腔微生物群中。因此,这些结果表明,尽管环境和饮食相同,但每头动物都有一组特定的细菌,这支持了每头动物与其微生物群之间的紧密相互作用。乳腺炎易感性评分与乳汁相关微生物群略有但显著相关,这表明宿主基因与微生物群之间存在联系。
这项工作突出了动物健康和生产相关微生物群之间在动物水平上的重要微生物共享,而牛群中动物个体之间的共同微生物存在有限。这表明宿主对身体相关微生物群有调节作用,根据乳腺炎易感性基因型相关的乳汁微生物群变化,这种调节作用在不同身体部位的表达似乎有所不同。