Host genetics influence the rumen microbiota and heritable rumen microbial features associate with feed efficiency in cattle

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DOI

https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-019-0699-1

Language of the publication
English
Date
2019-06-13
Type
Article
Author(s)
  • Li, Fuyong
  • Li, Changxi
  • Chen, Yanhong
  • Liu, Junhong
  • Zhang, Chunyan
  • Irving, Barry
  • Fitzsimmons, Carolyn
  • Plastow, Graham
  • Guan, Le Luo
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd.

Abstract

Background The symbiotic rumen microbiota is essential for the digestion of plant fibers and contributes to the variation of production and health traits in ruminants. However, to date, the heritability of rumen microbial features and host genetic components associated with the rumen microbiota, as well as whether such genetic components are animal performance relevant, are largely unknown. Results In the present study, we assessed rumen microbiota from a cohort of 709 beef cattle and showed that multiple factors including breed, sex, and diet drove the variation of rumen microbiota among animals. The diversity indices, the relative abundance of ~ 34% of microbial taxa (59 out of 174), and the copy number of total bacteria had a heritability estimate (h2) ≥ 0.15, suggesting that they are heritable elements affected by host additive genetics. These moderately heritable rumen microbial features were also found to be associated with host feed efficiency traits and rumen metabolic measures (volatile fatty acids). Moreover, 19 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) located on 12 bovine chromosomes were found to be associated with 14 (12 of them had h2 ≥ 0.15) rumen microbial taxa, and five of these SNPs were known quantitative trait loci for feed efficiency in cattle. Conclusions These findings suggest that some rumen microbial features are heritable and could be influenced by host genetics, highlighting a potential to manipulate and obtain a desirable and efficient rumen microbiota using genetic selection and breeding. It could be a useful strategy to further improve feed efficiency and optimize rumen fermentation through targeting both cattle and their rumen microbiota.

Subject

  • Agriculture

Rights

Peer review

Yes

Open access level

Gold

Identifiers

ISSN
2049-2618

Article

Journal title
Microbiome
Journal volume
7
Journal issue
1
Article number
92
Accepted date
2019-05-19
Submitted date
2018-12-09

Citation(s)

Li, F., Li, C., Chen, Y., Liu, J., Zhang, C., Irving, B., Fitzsimmons, C., Plastow, G., & Guan, L. L. (2019). Host genetics influence the rumen microbiota and heritable rumen microbial features associate with feed efficiency in cattle. Microbiome, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-019-0699-1

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Biology

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