Bovine neonatal microbiome origins: a review of proposed microbial community presence from conception to colostrum.
Riley D MessmanCaleb O LemleyPublished in: Translational animal science (2023)
In recent years, there has been an influx of research evaluating the roles of the reproductive tract microbiota in modulating reproductive performance. These efforts have resulted in a breadth of research exploring the bovine reproductive tract microbiota. The female reproductive tract microbiota has been characterized during the estrus cycle, at timed artificial insemination, during gestation, and postpartum. Additionally, there are recently published studies investigating in-utero inoculation of the bovine fetus. However, critical review of the literature to understand how the microbial shifts during a dam's lifecycle could impact neonatal outcomes is limited. This review demonstrates a consistency at the phyla level throughout both the maternal, paternal, and neonatal microbiomes. Moreover, this review challenges the current gestational inoculation hypothesis and suggests instead a maturation of the resident uterine microbiota throughout gestation to parturition. Recent literature is indicative of microbial composition influencing metabolomic parameters that have developmental programming effects in feed utilization and metabolic performance later in life. Thus, this review enumerates the potential origins of neonatal microbial inoculation from conception, through gestation, parturition, and colostrum consumption while introducing clear paucities where future research is needed to better understand the ramifications of the reproductive microbiome on neonates.
Keyphrases
- microbial community
- preterm infants
- antibiotic resistance genes
- weight gain
- systematic review
- patient safety
- gestational age
- quality improvement
- pregnant women
- randomized controlled trial
- physical activity
- human milk
- body mass index
- adipose tissue
- type diabetes
- risk assessment
- current status
- case control
- metabolic syndrome