Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

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Standard

Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). / Ingerslev, Hans Christian; Dalsgaard, Inger; Jørgensen, Louise von Gersdorff; Madsen, Lone.

2013. Abstract fra GIA 2013, Bodø, Norge.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

Ingerslev, HC, Dalsgaard, I, Jørgensen, LVG & Madsen, L 2013, 'Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)', GIA 2013, Bodø, Norge, 04/09/2013. <http://gia2013.org/images/GIA_pdfs/GIA2013_programme_FINAL.pdf>

APA

Ingerslev, H. C., Dalsgaard, I., Jørgensen, L. V. G., & Madsen, L. (2013). Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Abstract fra GIA 2013, Bodø, Norge. http://gia2013.org/images/GIA_pdfs/GIA2013_programme_FINAL.pdf

Vancouver

Ingerslev HC, Dalsgaard I, Jørgensen LVG, Madsen L. Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). 2013. Abstract fra GIA 2013, Bodø, Norge.

Author

Ingerslev, Hans Christian ; Dalsgaard, Inger ; Jørgensen, Louise von Gersdorff ; Madsen, Lone. / Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss). Abstract fra GIA 2013, Bodø, Norge.1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{5aeac41e413340238dbbf6a8d7ced051,
title = "Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)",
abstract = "In warm-blooded animals such as humans and pigs the intestinal microbiota is known to balance the immune system and prevent colonization of pathogenic bacteria. The question is if the gut microbiota is also important in lower vertebrates such as fish? Is the microbiota related to the diet type and does it play a protective role in connection to pathogenic challenge? To examine these questions rainbow trout fry were fed two different diets of either a marine or vegetable origin from first feeding and onwards. At a size of about four gram a subset of the fish were bath challenged by Yersinia ruckeri serotype O1 and intestines were then sampled 5 days post challenge for subsequent metagenomic examination based on the 16S rDNA gene. Next-generation sequencing was applied for the metagenomic studies using the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform. Obtained sequences were paired, sorted, filtered, checked for chimera and finally mapped against the Greengene database using the open-source package Bion-meta. For non-infected control fish, the results showed two distinctly different microbial patterns in the intestines dependent on the administered diet type. Fish fed a marine based diet overall had a significantly higher amount of the class β-proteobacteria, while phylum Firmicutes was significantly higher abundant in the intestines of vegetable fed fish. The genera within phylum Firmicutes present in significantly higher amounts in vegetable fed fish were Weissella, Leuconostoc and Streptococcus. Genus Aeromonas from the γ-proteobacteria class was also present in significantly higher amounts in the vegetable fed fish.The microbial community changed in the fish that were challenged by Yersinia ruckeri. Challenged fish clustered into two groups according to the load of Yersinia ruckeri specific reads in their intestine; the main part of challenged fish (n = 34) had a low amount of Yersinia specific reads (≤ 1.2 % of total amount of reads), while a minor group (n = 6) had a high load ranging between 13.9 and 23.2 % of all reads. These {\textquoteleft}high Yersinia level{\textquoteright} fish had a significantly lower amount of reads from the order Burkholderiales relative to the {\textquoteleft}low Yersinia level{\textquoteright} fish and non-infected control fish. Further, the {\textquoteleft}high Yersinia level{\textquoteright} fish further clustered separately when analyzing the bacterial community on a PCA plot. The immunological examinations were performed by RT-qPCR in order to measure the expression of selected immune genes. The results showed a similar expression pattern between the two diet groups of non-infected fish, but the response differed between the two diet groups in challenged fish. Here, the general pattern was a pro-inflammatory response in the intestine of marine fed fish challenged with Yersinia ruckeri relative to non-infected control fish, while several immune genes were down-regulated in vegetable fed fish relative to non-infected control fish. Overall, the results indicate that the gut microbiota in rainbow trout, like in warm-blooded animals, is highly plastic according to the type of diet and does further seem to be involved in the immunological response in connection to pathogenic challenge. ",
author = "Ingerslev, {Hans Christian} and Inger Dalsgaard and J{\o}rgensen, {Louise von Gersdorff} and Lone Madsen",
note = "ID 218; null ; Conference date: 04-09-2013",
year = "2013",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Diet type and challenge by Yersinia ruckeri influence the intestinal microbiota in rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss)

AU - Ingerslev, Hans Christian

AU - Dalsgaard, Inger

AU - Jørgensen, Louise von Gersdorff

AU - Madsen, Lone

N1 - ID 218

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - In warm-blooded animals such as humans and pigs the intestinal microbiota is known to balance the immune system and prevent colonization of pathogenic bacteria. The question is if the gut microbiota is also important in lower vertebrates such as fish? Is the microbiota related to the diet type and does it play a protective role in connection to pathogenic challenge? To examine these questions rainbow trout fry were fed two different diets of either a marine or vegetable origin from first feeding and onwards. At a size of about four gram a subset of the fish were bath challenged by Yersinia ruckeri serotype O1 and intestines were then sampled 5 days post challenge for subsequent metagenomic examination based on the 16S rDNA gene. Next-generation sequencing was applied for the metagenomic studies using the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform. Obtained sequences were paired, sorted, filtered, checked for chimera and finally mapped against the Greengene database using the open-source package Bion-meta. For non-infected control fish, the results showed two distinctly different microbial patterns in the intestines dependent on the administered diet type. Fish fed a marine based diet overall had a significantly higher amount of the class β-proteobacteria, while phylum Firmicutes was significantly higher abundant in the intestines of vegetable fed fish. The genera within phylum Firmicutes present in significantly higher amounts in vegetable fed fish were Weissella, Leuconostoc and Streptococcus. Genus Aeromonas from the γ-proteobacteria class was also present in significantly higher amounts in the vegetable fed fish.The microbial community changed in the fish that were challenged by Yersinia ruckeri. Challenged fish clustered into two groups according to the load of Yersinia ruckeri specific reads in their intestine; the main part of challenged fish (n = 34) had a low amount of Yersinia specific reads (≤ 1.2 % of total amount of reads), while a minor group (n = 6) had a high load ranging between 13.9 and 23.2 % of all reads. These ‘high Yersinia level’ fish had a significantly lower amount of reads from the order Burkholderiales relative to the ‘low Yersinia level’ fish and non-infected control fish. Further, the ‘high Yersinia level’ fish further clustered separately when analyzing the bacterial community on a PCA plot. The immunological examinations were performed by RT-qPCR in order to measure the expression of selected immune genes. The results showed a similar expression pattern between the two diet groups of non-infected fish, but the response differed between the two diet groups in challenged fish. Here, the general pattern was a pro-inflammatory response in the intestine of marine fed fish challenged with Yersinia ruckeri relative to non-infected control fish, while several immune genes were down-regulated in vegetable fed fish relative to non-infected control fish. Overall, the results indicate that the gut microbiota in rainbow trout, like in warm-blooded animals, is highly plastic according to the type of diet and does further seem to be involved in the immunological response in connection to pathogenic challenge.

AB - In warm-blooded animals such as humans and pigs the intestinal microbiota is known to balance the immune system and prevent colonization of pathogenic bacteria. The question is if the gut microbiota is also important in lower vertebrates such as fish? Is the microbiota related to the diet type and does it play a protective role in connection to pathogenic challenge? To examine these questions rainbow trout fry were fed two different diets of either a marine or vegetable origin from first feeding and onwards. At a size of about four gram a subset of the fish were bath challenged by Yersinia ruckeri serotype O1 and intestines were then sampled 5 days post challenge for subsequent metagenomic examination based on the 16S rDNA gene. Next-generation sequencing was applied for the metagenomic studies using the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform. Obtained sequences were paired, sorted, filtered, checked for chimera and finally mapped against the Greengene database using the open-source package Bion-meta. For non-infected control fish, the results showed two distinctly different microbial patterns in the intestines dependent on the administered diet type. Fish fed a marine based diet overall had a significantly higher amount of the class β-proteobacteria, while phylum Firmicutes was significantly higher abundant in the intestines of vegetable fed fish. The genera within phylum Firmicutes present in significantly higher amounts in vegetable fed fish were Weissella, Leuconostoc and Streptococcus. Genus Aeromonas from the γ-proteobacteria class was also present in significantly higher amounts in the vegetable fed fish.The microbial community changed in the fish that were challenged by Yersinia ruckeri. Challenged fish clustered into two groups according to the load of Yersinia ruckeri specific reads in their intestine; the main part of challenged fish (n = 34) had a low amount of Yersinia specific reads (≤ 1.2 % of total amount of reads), while a minor group (n = 6) had a high load ranging between 13.9 and 23.2 % of all reads. These ‘high Yersinia level’ fish had a significantly lower amount of reads from the order Burkholderiales relative to the ‘low Yersinia level’ fish and non-infected control fish. Further, the ‘high Yersinia level’ fish further clustered separately when analyzing the bacterial community on a PCA plot. The immunological examinations were performed by RT-qPCR in order to measure the expression of selected immune genes. The results showed a similar expression pattern between the two diet groups of non-infected fish, but the response differed between the two diet groups in challenged fish. Here, the general pattern was a pro-inflammatory response in the intestine of marine fed fish challenged with Yersinia ruckeri relative to non-infected control fish, while several immune genes were down-regulated in vegetable fed fish relative to non-infected control fish. Overall, the results indicate that the gut microbiota in rainbow trout, like in warm-blooded animals, is highly plastic according to the type of diet and does further seem to be involved in the immunological response in connection to pathogenic challenge.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 4 September 2013

ER -

ID: 49689403