Skarlupka Joseph H, Cox Madison S, Steinberger Andrew J, Sbardellati Dino L, Scheftgen Andrew J, Zuniga-Chaves Ibrahim, Paget Eric, Skadron Charles, Attipetty Nithya, McClure Jennifer C, Bickhart Derek M, Suen Garret
Microbiology Doctoral Training Program, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
Department of Bacteriology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
mSphere. 2025 Jun 25;10(6):e0016725. doi: 10.1128/msphere.00167-25. Epub 2025 May 14.
Oral swabs of dairy cows have been suggested as a proxy for direct ruminal sampling, and this approach can identify the presence of up to 70% of the rumen microbial community. Here, we further extend the utility of this approach by correlating the bacterial community of swabs collected from 226 dairy cows on a research farm in Wisconsin, USA, with average milk yield and days in milk, two phenotypes previously associated with differences in the ruminal microbiome. We then obtained milk production efficiency data for a subset of these animals (gross feed efficiency [GFE] and residual feed intake [RFI]) and correlated these metrics against their associated microbial data. We found that when using the oral swabs, we could identify correlations between bacterial genera and days in milk ( < 0.05). We further show that the ruminal microbiota was associated with average milk yield and days in milk for animals in their first lactation. Differential abundance testing identified amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) associated with these metrics ( < 0.05). Our comparison of bacterial communities between high and low efficiency groups, as determined by GFE and RFI, identified a significant difference in Shannon's diversity in second lactation cows ( < 0.05). We also found that RFI was significantly correlated with the bacterial community in second lactation animals ( < 0.05). Differential abundance analysis identified multiple oral- and rumen-associated ASVs correlated with GFE and RFI ( < 0.05). This study further establishes the utility of oral swabs as a ruminal proxy.IMPORTANCEImproving milk production efficiency is a key goal in the dairy industry and is traditionally pursued through genetic selection, diet optimization, and herd management practices. The ruminal microbiome, essential for digesting feed, has been linked to milk production efficiency, suggesting that microbiome modulation could improve efficiency. However, the integration of rumen microbiology into current management practices is hampered by the difficulty of large-scale rumen sampling, as proxies like fecal samples do not accurately reflect the ruminal microbiota. Traditional methods, like cannulation and stomach tubing, are labor-intensive and impractical for extensive sampling. Our research demonstrates the potential use of oral swabs as a scalable, effective method for characterizing the microbiome and its associations with milk production metrics, recapitulating established associations obtained through traditional ruminal sampling methods.
奶牛的口腔拭子已被建议作为直接瘤胃采样的替代方法,这种方法可以识别高达70%的瘤胃微生物群落。在此,我们通过将从美国威斯康星州一个研究农场的226头奶牛采集的拭子细菌群落与平均产奶量和泌乳天数相关联,进一步扩展了这种方法的实用性,这两个表型此前与瘤胃微生物组的差异有关。然后,我们获得了这些动物子集的产奶效率数据(总饲料效率[GFE]和剩余饲料摄入量[RFI]),并将这些指标与其相关的微生物数据进行关联。我们发现,使用口腔拭子时,可以识别细菌属与泌乳天数之间的相关性(<0.05)。我们进一步表明,瘤胃微生物群与初产动物的平均产奶量和泌乳天数有关。差异丰度测试确定了与这些指标相关的扩增子序列变体(ASV)(<0.05)。我们根据GFE和RFI确定的高效组和低效组之间的细菌群落比较,发现第二胎奶牛的香农多样性存在显著差异(<0.05)。我们还发现,RFI与第二胎动物的细菌群落显著相关(<0.05)。差异丰度分析确定了多个与GFE和RFI相关的口腔和瘤胃相关ASV(<0.05)。本研究进一步确立了口腔拭子作为瘤胃替代物的实用性。
重要性
提高产奶效率是乳制品行业的一个关键目标,传统上通过遗传选择、饮食优化和畜群管理实践来实现。瘤胃微生物组对于饲料消化至关重要,已与产奶效率相关联,这表明调节微生物组可以提高效率。然而,瘤胃微生物学融入当前管理实践受到大规模瘤胃采样困难的阻碍,因为粪便样本等替代物不能准确反映瘤胃微生物群。传统方法,如插管和胃管法,劳动强度大,不适合广泛采样。我们的研究证明了口腔拭子作为一种可扩展、有效的方法来表征微生物组及其与产奶指标的关联的潜在用途,概括了通过传统瘤胃采样方法获得的既定关联。