Unexpected finding ofFusobacterium variumas the dominantFusobacteriumspecies in cattle rumen: potential implications for liver abscess etiology and interventions

Author:

Schwarz Cory12ORCID,Mathieu Jacques12,Gomez Jenny Laverde2,Miller Megan R1,Tikhonova Marina2,Nagaraja Tiruvoor.G3ORCID,Alvarez Pedro J J12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Rice University , Houston, TX 77005 , USA

2. Sentinel Environmental Group, LLC , Houston , TX 77082 , USA

3. Department of Diagnostic Medicine/Pathobiology, College of Veterinary Medicine, Kansas State University , Manhattan, KS 66506 , USA

Abstract

AbstractFusobacterium varium has been generally overlooked in cattle rumen microbiome studies relative to the presumably more abundant liver abscess-causing Fusobacterium necrophorum. However, F. varium was found to be more abundant in the rumen fluid of cattle and under culture conditions tailored to enrich F. necrophorum. Using near-full length 16S ribosomal ribonucleic acid sequencing, we demonstrate that F. varium grows under restrictive conditions commonly used to enumerate F. necrophorum, suggesting that previous F. necrophorum abundance assessment may have been inaccurate and that F. varium may be an underestimated member of the ruminal bacterial community. Fusobacterium varium were not as susceptible as F. necrophorum to in-feed antibiotics conventionally used in feedlots. Exposure to tylosin, the current gold standard for liver abscess reduction strategies in cattle, consistently hindered growth of the F. necrophorum strains tested by over 67% (P < 0.05) relative to the unexposed control. In contrast, F. varium strains were totally or highly resistant (0%–13% reduction in maximum yield, P < 0.05). Monensin, an ionophore antibiotic, had greater inhibitory activity against F. necrophorum than F. varium. Finally, preliminary genomic analysis of two F. varium isolates from the rumen revealed the presence of virulence genes related to those of pathogenic human F. varium isolates associated with active invasion of mammalian cells. The data presented here encourage further investigation into the ecological role of F. varium within the bovine rumen and potential role in liver abscess development, and proactive interventions.

Funder

National Science Foundation

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Animal Science and Zoology,General Medicine,Food Science

Reference82 articles.

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