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The influence of a probiotic/prebiotic supplement on microbial and metabolic parameters of equine cecal fluid or fecal slurry in vitro.

Jennifer L MacNicolSimone RenwickCaroline M GanobisEmma Allen-VercoeJeffery S WeeseWendy Pearson
Published in: Journal of animal science (2023)
The microbes that reside within the equine hindgut create a complex and dynamic ecosystem. The equine hindgut microbiota is intimately associated with health and, as such, represents an area which can be beneficially modified. Synbiotics, supplements that combine probiotic microorganisms with prebiotic ingredients, are a potential means of influencing the hindgut microbiota to promote health and prevent disease. The objective of the current study was to evaluate the influence of an equine probiotic/prebiotic supplement on characteristics of the microbiota and metabolite production in vitro. Equine cecal fluid and fecal material were collected from an abattoir in QC, CAN. Five hundred ml of cecal fluid was used to inoculate chemostat vessels maintained as batch fermenters (chemostat cecal, n=11) with either 0g (control) or 0.44g of supplement added at 12h intervals. One hundred ml of cecal fluid (anaerobic cecal, n=15) or 5% fecal slurry (anaerobic fecal, n=6) were maintained in an anaerobic chamber with either 0g (control) or 0.356g of supplement added at the time of vessel establishment. Samples were taken from vessels at vessel establishment (0h), 24h, or 48h of incubation. Illumina sequencing of the V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene and bioinformatics were performed for microbiome analysis. Metabolite data was obtained via NMR spectroscopy. All statistical analyses were run in SAS 9.4. There was no effect of treatment at 24h or 48h on alpha or beta diversity indices and limited taxonomic differences were noted. Acetate, propionate, and butyrate were higher in treated compared to untreated vessels in all methods. A consistent effect of supplementation on the metabolic profile with no discernable impact on the microbiota of these in vitro systems indicates inoculum microbe viability and a utilization of the provided fermentable substrate within the systems. Although no changes within the microbiome were apparent, the consistent changes in metabolites indicates a potential prebiotic effect of the added supplement and merits further exploration.
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