Poster (Scientific congresses and symposiums)
Comparison of faecal microbiota of horses suffering from atypical myopathy and healthy co-grazers
Cerri, Simona; Taminiau, Bernard; Votion, Dominique et al.
201710th annual congress of the European College of Equine Internal Medicine (ECEIM)
 

Files


Full Text
Abstract ECEIM 2017.pdf
Author preprint (53.38 kB)
Download

All documents in ORBi are protected by a user license.

Send to



Details



Keywords :
Atypical myopathy; microbiota; horse
Abstract :
[en] Objectives: To characterize faecal microbiota of horses with atypical myopathy (AM) compared with healthy co-grazers (HcG). Methods: Fresh faecal samples were obtained from 6 horses (1 stallion, 3 geldings and 2 females; mean age of 11.810 years) with confirmed AM and 6 HcG (4 geldings and 2 females; mean age of 13.68 years) during autumn-2016 and spring-2017 AM outbreaks in Belgium. Bacterial taxonomy profiling obtained by 16S amplicon sequencing of faeces was used to identify differentially distributed bacterial taxa between AM and HcG. Results were statistically compared using Welch's t-test with STAMP software. Results: A total of 90,407 sequences were analysed and clustered to 8,066 operational taxonomic units. Bacterial populations were distributed between 17 phylas, although 20% of sequences could not be attributed to an existing phylum. Horses with AM harboured a significantly higher relative abundance of Ruminococcaeae family with a significantly lower Lachnospiraceae when compared to HcG. Discussion: AM is caused by hypoglycin A intoxication, but only a part of horses pasturing in the same toxic environment develops the pathology, suggesting that there may be protective factors at the horse level. The results of this study show significant differences in faecal microbiota between AM cases and HcG, which could suggest that microbiota could play a role in the development or prevention of clinical disease. Conclusions: Results demonstrate that microbiota of AM affected horses is significantly different compared to HcG. Significance: Microbiome could influence the development of AM, but this role deserves further investigation.
Research center :
FARAH - Fundamental and Applied Research for Animals and Health - ULiège
Disciplines :
Veterinary medicine & animal health
Author, co-author :
Cerri, Simona ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Dép. clinique des animaux de compagnie et des équidés (DCA) > Médecine interne des équidés
Taminiau, Bernard  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de sciences des denrées alimentaires (DDA) > Microbiologie des denrées alimentaires
Votion, Dominique  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Scientifiques attachés au Doyen (F MV)
Amory, Hélène ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Dép. clinique des animaux de compagnie et des équidés (DCA) > Médecine interne des équidés
Daube, Georges  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Département de sciences des denrées alimentaires (DDA) > Microbiologie des denrées alimentaires
Cesarini Latorre, Carlota  ;  Université de Liège - ULiège > Dép. clinique des animaux de compagnie et des équidés (DCA) > Médecine interne des équidés
Language :
English
Title :
Comparison of faecal microbiota of horses suffering from atypical myopathy and healthy co-grazers
Publication date :
02 November 2017
Event name :
10th annual congress of the European College of Equine Internal Medicine (ECEIM)
Event organizer :
European College of Equine Internal Medicine (ECEIM)
Event place :
Budapest, Hungary
Event date :
2-4/11/2017
Audience :
International
Available on ORBi :
since 09 December 2017

Statistics


Number of views
131 (28 by ULiège)
Number of downloads
53 (14 by ULiège)

Bibliography


Similar publications



Contact ORBi