Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans

Optimization of the fatty acid composition of ruminant milk and meat is desirable. Dietary supplementation of algae was previously shown to inhibit rumen biohydrogenation, resulting in an altered milk fatty acid profile. Bacteria involved in biohydrogenation belong to the Butyrivibrio group. This study was aimed at relating accumulation of biohydrogenation intermediates with shifts in Butyrivibrio spp. in the rumen of dairy cows. Therefore, an experiment was performed with three rumen-fistulated dairy cows receiving a concentrate containing algae (9.35 g/kg total dry matter [DM] intake) for 20 days. Supplementation of the diet with algae inhibited biohydrogenation of C18:2 omega 6 (n-6) and C18:3 n-3, resulting in increased concentrations of biohydrogenation intermediates, whereas C18:0 decreased. Addition of algae increased ruminal C18:1 trans fatty acid concentrations, mainly due to 6- and 20-fold increases in C18:1 trans 11 (t11) and C18:1 t10. The number of ciliates (5.37 log copies/g rumen digesta) and the composition of the ciliate community were unaffected by dietary algae. In contrast, supplementation of the diet with algae changed the composition of the bacterial community. Primers for the Butyrivibrio group, including the genera Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio, were specifically designed. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis showed community changes upon addition of algae without affecting the total amount of Butyrivibrio bacteria (7.06 log copies/g rumen DM). Clone libraries showed that algae affected noncultivated species, which cluster taxonomically between the genera Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio and might play a role in biohydrogenation. In addition, 20% of the clones from a randomly selected rumen sample were related to the C18:0-producing branch, although the associated C18:0 concentration decreased through supplementation of the diet with algae

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Main Authors: Boeckaert, C., Vlaeminck, B., Fievez, V., Maignien, L., Dijkstra, J., Boon, N.
Format: Article/Letter to editor biblioteca
Language:English
Subjects:biohydrogenation, chain, clostridium-proteoclasticum, conjugated linoleic-acid, fish-oil, in-vitro, lipolysis, pcr, primers, ruminal bacterium,
Online Access:https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/accumulation-of-trans-c181-fatty-acids-in-the-rumen-after-dietary
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spelling dig-wur-nl-wurpubs-3717882024-12-04 Boeckaert, C. Vlaeminck, B. Fievez, V. Maignien, L. Dijkstra, J. Boon, N. Article/Letter to editor Applied and Environmental Microbiology 74 (2008) 22 ISSN: 0099-2240 Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans 2008 Optimization of the fatty acid composition of ruminant milk and meat is desirable. Dietary supplementation of algae was previously shown to inhibit rumen biohydrogenation, resulting in an altered milk fatty acid profile. Bacteria involved in biohydrogenation belong to the Butyrivibrio group. This study was aimed at relating accumulation of biohydrogenation intermediates with shifts in Butyrivibrio spp. in the rumen of dairy cows. Therefore, an experiment was performed with three rumen-fistulated dairy cows receiving a concentrate containing algae (9.35 g/kg total dry matter [DM] intake) for 20 days. Supplementation of the diet with algae inhibited biohydrogenation of C18:2 omega 6 (n-6) and C18:3 n-3, resulting in increased concentrations of biohydrogenation intermediates, whereas C18:0 decreased. Addition of algae increased ruminal C18:1 trans fatty acid concentrations, mainly due to 6- and 20-fold increases in C18:1 trans 11 (t11) and C18:1 t10. The number of ciliates (5.37 log copies/g rumen digesta) and the composition of the ciliate community were unaffected by dietary algae. In contrast, supplementation of the diet with algae changed the composition of the bacterial community. Primers for the Butyrivibrio group, including the genera Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio, were specifically designed. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis showed community changes upon addition of algae without affecting the total amount of Butyrivibrio bacteria (7.06 log copies/g rumen DM). Clone libraries showed that algae affected noncultivated species, which cluster taxonomically between the genera Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio and might play a role in biohydrogenation. In addition, 20% of the clones from a randomly selected rumen sample were related to the C18:0-producing branch, although the associated C18:0 concentration decreased through supplementation of the diet with algae en application/pdf https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/accumulation-of-trans-c181-fatty-acids-in-the-rumen-after-dietary 10.1128/AEM.01473-08 https://edepot.wur.nl/18670 biohydrogenation chain clostridium-proteoclasticum conjugated linoleic-acid fish-oil in-vitro lipolysis pcr primers ruminal bacterium Wageningen University & Research
institution WUR NL
collection DSpace
country Países bajos
countrycode NL
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-wur-nl
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname WUR Library Netherlands
language English
topic biohydrogenation
chain
clostridium-proteoclasticum
conjugated linoleic-acid
fish-oil
in-vitro
lipolysis
pcr
primers
ruminal bacterium
biohydrogenation
chain
clostridium-proteoclasticum
conjugated linoleic-acid
fish-oil
in-vitro
lipolysis
pcr
primers
ruminal bacterium
spellingShingle biohydrogenation
chain
clostridium-proteoclasticum
conjugated linoleic-acid
fish-oil
in-vitro
lipolysis
pcr
primers
ruminal bacterium
biohydrogenation
chain
clostridium-proteoclasticum
conjugated linoleic-acid
fish-oil
in-vitro
lipolysis
pcr
primers
ruminal bacterium
Boeckaert, C.
Vlaeminck, B.
Fievez, V.
Maignien, L.
Dijkstra, J.
Boon, N.
Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans
description Optimization of the fatty acid composition of ruminant milk and meat is desirable. Dietary supplementation of algae was previously shown to inhibit rumen biohydrogenation, resulting in an altered milk fatty acid profile. Bacteria involved in biohydrogenation belong to the Butyrivibrio group. This study was aimed at relating accumulation of biohydrogenation intermediates with shifts in Butyrivibrio spp. in the rumen of dairy cows. Therefore, an experiment was performed with three rumen-fistulated dairy cows receiving a concentrate containing algae (9.35 g/kg total dry matter [DM] intake) for 20 days. Supplementation of the diet with algae inhibited biohydrogenation of C18:2 omega 6 (n-6) and C18:3 n-3, resulting in increased concentrations of biohydrogenation intermediates, whereas C18:0 decreased. Addition of algae increased ruminal C18:1 trans fatty acid concentrations, mainly due to 6- and 20-fold increases in C18:1 trans 11 (t11) and C18:1 t10. The number of ciliates (5.37 log copies/g rumen digesta) and the composition of the ciliate community were unaffected by dietary algae. In contrast, supplementation of the diet with algae changed the composition of the bacterial community. Primers for the Butyrivibrio group, including the genera Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio, were specifically designed. Denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis showed community changes upon addition of algae without affecting the total amount of Butyrivibrio bacteria (7.06 log copies/g rumen DM). Clone libraries showed that algae affected noncultivated species, which cluster taxonomically between the genera Butyrivibrio and Pseudobutyrivibrio and might play a role in biohydrogenation. In addition, 20% of the clones from a randomly selected rumen sample were related to the C18:0-producing branch, although the associated C18:0 concentration decreased through supplementation of the diet with algae
format Article/Letter to editor
topic_facet biohydrogenation
chain
clostridium-proteoclasticum
conjugated linoleic-acid
fish-oil
in-vitro
lipolysis
pcr
primers
ruminal bacterium
author Boeckaert, C.
Vlaeminck, B.
Fievez, V.
Maignien, L.
Dijkstra, J.
Boon, N.
author_facet Boeckaert, C.
Vlaeminck, B.
Fievez, V.
Maignien, L.
Dijkstra, J.
Boon, N.
author_sort Boeckaert, C.
title Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans
title_short Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans
title_full Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans
title_fullStr Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans
title_full_unstemmed Accumulation of trans C18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the Butyrivibrio communitytrans
title_sort accumulation of trans c18:1 fatty acids in the rumen after dietary algal supplementation is associated with canges in the butyrivibrio communitytrans
url https://research.wur.nl/en/publications/accumulation-of-trans-c181-fatty-acids-in-the-rumen-after-dietary
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