Feeding modes shape the acquisition and structure of the initial gut microbiota in newborn lambs

Author:

Bi Yanliang1,Cox Madison S.2,Zhang Fan1,Suen Garret2,Zhang Naifeng1,Tu Yan1,Diao Qiyu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Feed Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences Key Laboratory of Feed Biotechnology of the Ministry of Agriculture, 100081 Beijing China

2. Department of Bacteriology University of Wisconsin‐Madison, 53706‐1521 Madison USA

Abstract

SummaryEarly gut microbial colonization is important for postnatal metabolic and immune development. However, little is known about the effects of different feeding modes (suckling versus bottle‐feeding) or microbial sources on this process in farm animals. We found that suckled and bottle‐fed newborn lambs had their own distinct gut microbiota. Results from 16S rRNA gene sequencing and qPCR showed that, compared with suckling, bottle feeding significantly increased the abundances ofEscherichia/Shigella,Butyricicoccus, andClostridiumXlVa, while significantly decreased the abundance ofClostridiumXI. The higher levels ofEscherichia/Shigellain bottle‐fed lambs suggest that artificial feeding may increase the number of potential pathogens and delay the establishment of the anaerobic environment and anaerobic microbes. Feeding modes also affected the direct transmission of bacteria from the mother and the environment to newborns. The SourceTracker analysis estimated that the early gut microbes of suckled lambs were mainly derived from the mother's teats (43%) and ambient air (28%); whereas those of bottle‐fed lambs were dominated by bacteria from the mother's vagina (46%), ambient air (31%), and the sheep pen floor (12%). These findings advance our understanding of gut microbiota in early life and may help design techniques to improve gut microbiota and health.

Funder

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Wiley

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