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Equine Vet J


Title:Characterisation of the faecal metabolome and microbiome of Thoroughbred racehorses
Author(s):Proudman CJ; Hunter JO; Darby AC; Escalona EE; Batty C; Turner C;
Address:"School of Veterinary Medicine, University of Surrey, Guildford, UK. Gastroenterology Research Unit, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge, UK. Institute of Integrative Biology, University of Liverpool, UK. Department of Gastroenterology/School of Veterinary Science, University of Liverpool, Neston, UK. Department of Life, Health and Chemical Sciences, Open University, Milton Keynes, UK"
Journal Title:Equine Vet J
Year:2015
Volume:20140929
Issue:5
Page Number:580 - 586
DOI: 10.1111/evj.12324
ISSN/ISBN:2042-3306 (Electronic) 0425-1644 (Linking)
Abstract:"REASONS FOR PERFORMING STUDY: The intestinal bacterial community of the horse is a key determinant of intestinal and whole body health. Understanding the bacterial community structure and function is an important foundation for studies of intestinal health and disease. OBJECTIVES: To describe the faecal bacterial community and volatile organic compounds (VOCs) of the faecal metabolome of healthy Thoroughbred racehorses and to characterise responses to dietary supplementation with amylase-rich malt extract. STUDY DESIGN: Intervention study. METHODS: Faecal samples were collected noninvasively before and 6 weeks after supplementation in 8 privately owned Thoroughbred racehorses in active race training. Faecal metabolome was characterised using thermal desorption-gas chromatography-mass spectrometry (TD-GC-MS), with spectral analysis performed using AMDIS and compared against the NIST database. Taxonomic description of the faecal microbiota was achieved using error-corrected 454 pyrosequencing data from 16S rRNA gene amplicons. RESULTS: The faecal metabolome of our study population was dominated by organic acids, alcohols and ketones. We identified 81 different VOCs only 28 of which were present in >50% of samples indicating functional diversity. Faecal VOC profiles differed between first and second sampling point, some VOCs being significantly reduced post supplementation, consistent with a marked response to dietary amylase-rich malt extract. Faecal microbiota was characterised as highly diverse; samples demonstrated verifiable diversity in the range 1200-3000 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) per individual. The methods used also describe high levels of infrequent, low abundance OTUs. Faecal microbial community structure was found to be different following dietary supplementation. Differences in several low abundance bacterial taxa were detected and also some evidence of interhorse variation in response. CONCLUSIONS: The volatile faecal metabolome of Thoroughbred racehorses is dominated by organic acids, alcohols and ketones; this study demonstrates that dietary supplementation with amylase-rich malt extract may significantly alter the profile of VOCs. The faecal microbiome is highly diverse, dominated by Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes. Small but significant changes in microbial community structure were detected following dietary supplementation. This study describes the faecal metabolome and microbiome of healthy Thoroughbred racehorses against which future studies of disease and dietary intervention can be benchmarked"
Keywords:Amylases/chemistry Animal Feed/analysis Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena Animals Bacteria/*classification/isolation & purification Diet/veterinary Dietary Supplements Feces/*chemistry/*microbiology Female Gastrointestinal Tract/microbiology Hors;
Notes:"MedlineProudman, C J Hunter, J O Darby, A C Escalona, E E Batty, C Turner, C eng Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't 2014/07/22 Equine Vet J. 2015 Sep; 47(5):580-6. doi: 10.1111/evj.12324. Epub 2014 Sep 29"

 
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