Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota

Abstract Background The porcine gastrointestinal microbiota has been linked to both host health and performance. Most pig gut microbiota studies target faecal material, which is not representative of microbiota dynamics in other discrete gut sections. The weaning transition period in pigs is a key d...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jolinda Pollock, Laura Glendinning, Lesley A. Smith, Hamna Mohsin, David L. Gally, Michael R. Hutchings, Jos G. M. Houdijk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-08-01
Series:Animal Microbiome
Subjects:
Gut
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s42523-021-00119-y
id doaj-2fb8af7b78a14291af338d1a1e96e020
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2fb8af7b78a14291af338d1a1e96e0202021-08-29T11:31:13ZengBMCAnimal Microbiome2524-46712021-08-013111710.1186/s42523-021-00119-yTemporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiotaJolinda Pollock0Laura Glendinning1Lesley A. Smith2Hamna Mohsin3David L. Gally4Michael R. Hutchings5Jos G. M. Houdijk6Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC)The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of EdinburghAnimal and Veterinary Sciences, Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC)The Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of EdinburghThe Roslin Institute and Royal (Dick) School of Veterinary Studies, University of EdinburghAnimal and Veterinary Sciences, Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC)Animal and Veterinary Sciences, Scotland’s Rural College (SRUC)Abstract Background The porcine gastrointestinal microbiota has been linked to both host health and performance. Most pig gut microbiota studies target faecal material, which is not representative of microbiota dynamics in other discrete gut sections. The weaning transition period in pigs is a key development stage, with gastrointestinal problems being prominent after often sudden introduction to a solid diet. A better understanding of both temporal and nutritional effects on the small intestinal microbiota is required. Here, the development of the porcine ileal microbiota under differing levels of dietary protein was observed over the immediate post-weaning period. Results Ileal digesta samples were obtained at post-mortem prior to weaning day (day − 1) for baseline measurements. The remaining pigs were introduced to either an 18% (low) or 23% (high) protein diet on weaning day (day 0) and further ileal digesta sampling was carried out at days 5, 9 and 13 post-weaning. We identified significant changes in microbiome structure (P = 0.01), a reduction in microbiome richness (P = 0.02) and changes in the abundance of specific bacterial taxa from baseline until 13 days post-weaning. The ileal microbiota became less stable after the introduction to a solid diet at weaning (P = 0.036), was highly variable between pigs and no relationship was observed between average daily weight gain and microbiota composition. The ileal microbiota was less stable in pigs fed the high protein diet (P = 0.05), with several pathogenic bacterial genera being significantly higher in abundance in this group. Samples from the low protein and high protein groups did not cluster separately by their CAZyme (carbohydrate-active enzyme) composition, but GH33 exosialidases were found to be significantly more abundant in the HP group (P = 0.006). Conclusions The weaner pig ileal microbiota changed rapidly and was initially destabilised by the sudden introduction to feed. Nutritional composition influenced ileal microbiota development, with the high protein diet being associated with an increased abundance of significant porcine pathogens and the upregulation of GH33 exosialidases—which can influence host-microbe interactions and pathogenicity. These findings contribute to our understanding of a lesser studied gut compartment that is not only a key site of digestion, but also a target for the development of nutritional interventions to improve gut health and host growth performance during the critical weaning transition period.https://doi.org/10.1186/s42523-021-00119-yMicrobiomeMicrobiotaIleumGutWeaningPigs
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jolinda Pollock
Laura Glendinning
Lesley A. Smith
Hamna Mohsin
David L. Gally
Michael R. Hutchings
Jos G. M. Houdijk
spellingShingle Jolinda Pollock
Laura Glendinning
Lesley A. Smith
Hamna Mohsin
David L. Gally
Michael R. Hutchings
Jos G. M. Houdijk
Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
Animal Microbiome
Microbiome
Microbiota
Ileum
Gut
Weaning
Pigs
author_facet Jolinda Pollock
Laura Glendinning
Lesley A. Smith
Hamna Mohsin
David L. Gally
Michael R. Hutchings
Jos G. M. Houdijk
author_sort Jolinda Pollock
title Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
title_short Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
title_full Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
title_fullStr Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
title_full_unstemmed Temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
title_sort temporal and nutritional effects on the weaner pig ileal microbiota
publisher BMC
series Animal Microbiome
issn 2524-4671
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Abstract Background The porcine gastrointestinal microbiota has been linked to both host health and performance. Most pig gut microbiota studies target faecal material, which is not representative of microbiota dynamics in other discrete gut sections. The weaning transition period in pigs is a key development stage, with gastrointestinal problems being prominent after often sudden introduction to a solid diet. A better understanding of both temporal and nutritional effects on the small intestinal microbiota is required. Here, the development of the porcine ileal microbiota under differing levels of dietary protein was observed over the immediate post-weaning period. Results Ileal digesta samples were obtained at post-mortem prior to weaning day (day − 1) for baseline measurements. The remaining pigs were introduced to either an 18% (low) or 23% (high) protein diet on weaning day (day 0) and further ileal digesta sampling was carried out at days 5, 9 and 13 post-weaning. We identified significant changes in microbiome structure (P = 0.01), a reduction in microbiome richness (P = 0.02) and changes in the abundance of specific bacterial taxa from baseline until 13 days post-weaning. The ileal microbiota became less stable after the introduction to a solid diet at weaning (P = 0.036), was highly variable between pigs and no relationship was observed between average daily weight gain and microbiota composition. The ileal microbiota was less stable in pigs fed the high protein diet (P = 0.05), with several pathogenic bacterial genera being significantly higher in abundance in this group. Samples from the low protein and high protein groups did not cluster separately by their CAZyme (carbohydrate-active enzyme) composition, but GH33 exosialidases were found to be significantly more abundant in the HP group (P = 0.006). Conclusions The weaner pig ileal microbiota changed rapidly and was initially destabilised by the sudden introduction to feed. Nutritional composition influenced ileal microbiota development, with the high protein diet being associated with an increased abundance of significant porcine pathogens and the upregulation of GH33 exosialidases—which can influence host-microbe interactions and pathogenicity. These findings contribute to our understanding of a lesser studied gut compartment that is not only a key site of digestion, but also a target for the development of nutritional interventions to improve gut health and host growth performance during the critical weaning transition period.
topic Microbiome
Microbiota
Ileum
Gut
Weaning
Pigs
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s42523-021-00119-y
work_keys_str_mv AT jolindapollock temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
AT lauraglendinning temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
AT lesleyasmith temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
AT hamnamohsin temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
AT davidlgally temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
AT michaelrhutchings temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
AT josgmhoudijk temporalandnutritionaleffectsontheweanerpigilealmicrobiota
_version_ 1721186682007453696