Department of Molecular Biotechnology and Microbiology, Faculty of Science and Technology, University of Debrecen, Egyetem tér 1., Debrecen, H4032, Hungary.
Doctoral School of Nutrition and Food Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Debrecen, Egyetem tér 1. / Böszörményi út 138, Debrecen, H4032, Hungary.
BMC Microbiol. 2024 Sep 12;24(1):340. doi: 10.1186/s12866-024-03499-8.
Along bacteria, yeasts are common in forages and forage fermentations as spoilage microbes or as additives, yet few studies exist with species-level data on these fungi's occurrence in feedstuff. Active dry yeast and other yeast-based products are also common feed additives in animal husbandry. Here, we aimed to characterize both fermented and non-fermented milking cow feedstuff samples from Hungary to assess their microbial diversity in the first such study from Central Europe.
We applied long-read bacterial metabarcoding to 10 fermented and 25 non-fermented types of samples to assess bacterial communities and their characteristics, surveyed culturable mold and yeast abundance, and identified culturable yeast species. Fermented forages showed the abundance of Aerococcaceae, Bacillaceae, Brucellaceae, Lactobacillaceae, Staphylococcaceae, and Thermoactinomycetaceae, non-fermented ones had Cyanothecaceae, Enterobacteriaceae, Erwiniaceae, Gomontiellaceae, Oxalobacteraceae, Rhodobiaceae, Rickettsiaceae, and Staphylococcaceae. Abundances of bacterial families showed mostly weak correlation with yeast CFU numbers, only Microcoleaceae (positive) and Enterococcaceae and Alcaligenaceae (negative correlation) showed moderate correlation. We identified 14 yeast species, most commonly Diutina rugosa, Pichia fermentans, P. kudriavzevii, and Wickerhahomyces anomalus. We recorded S. cerevisiae isolates only from animal feed mixes with added active dry yeast, while the species was completely absent from fermented forages. The S. cerevisiae isolates showed high genetic uniformity.
Our results show that both fermented and non-fermented forages harbor diverse bacterial microbiota, with higher alpha diversity in the latter. The bacterial microbiome had an overall weak correlation with yeast abundance, but yeasts were present in the majority of the samples, including four new records for forages as a habitat for yeasts. Yeasts in forages mostly represented common species including opportunistic pathogens, along with a single strain of Saccharomyces used as a feed mix additive.
与细菌一样,酵母在饲草和青贮发酵中是常见的腐败微生物或添加剂,但关于这些真菌在饲料中的存在,仅有少数具有种属水平数据的研究。活性干酵母和其他酵母基产品也是畜牧业中常见的饲料添加剂。在这里,我们旨在对来自匈牙利的发酵和非发酵奶牛饲料样品进行特征描述,这是中欧首次对其进行的微生物多样性研究。
我们应用长读长细菌代谢组学对 10 种发酵和 25 种非发酵类型的样品进行了分析,以评估细菌群落及其特征,调查可培养霉菌和酵母的丰度,并鉴定可培养酵母的种类。发酵饲料中 Aerococcaceae、Bacillaceae、Brucellaceae、Lactobacillaceae、Staphylococcaceae 和 Thermoactinomycetaceae 的丰度较高,而非发酵饲料中则有 Cyanothecaceae、Enterobacteriaceae、Erwiniaceae、Gomontiellaceae、Oxalobacteraceae、Rhodobiaceae、Rickettsiaceae 和 Staphylococcaceae。细菌科的丰度与酵母 CFU 数量大多呈弱相关性,只有 Microcoleaceae(正相关)和 Enterococcaceae 和 Alcaligenaceae(负相关)呈中度相关性。我们鉴定出 14 种酵母,最常见的是 Diutina rugosa、Pichia fermentans、P. kudriavzevii 和 Wickerhahomyces anomalus。我们仅在添加活性干酵母的动物饲料混合物中记录到 S. cerevisiae 分离株,而在发酵饲料中完全没有 S. cerevisiae。S. cerevisiae 分离株显示出高度的遗传均一性。
我们的研究结果表明,发酵和非发酵饲料均含有多样化的细菌微生物群,后者的 alpha 多样性更高。细菌微生物组与酵母丰度总体上呈弱相关性,但在大多数样本中都存在酵母,包括四种新记录的作为酵母栖息地的饲料。饲料中的酵母主要代表常见物种,包括机会性病原体,以及一种用作饲料混合物添加剂的单一酿酒酵母菌株。