Login / Signup

A survey of fecal virome and bacterial community of the diarrhea-affected cattle in northeast China reveals novel disease-associated ecological risk factors.

Qinghe ZhuShanshan QiDonghua GuoChunqiu LiMingjun SuJianfa WangZijian LiDan YangHaibo SunXiaoran WangMeijiao WangHaoyang WuShiping YuWenfei BaiYongchen ZhangXu YangLimin JiangJiaying LiuYingying ZhaoXiaoxu XingDa ShiLi FengDong-Bo Sun
Published in: mSystems (2023)
The lack of data on the virome and bacterial community restricts our capability to recognize ecological risk factors for bovine diarrhea disease, thereby hindering our overall comprehension of the disease's cause. In this study, we found that, for the diarrheal samples, the identified virome and bacterial community varied in terms of composition, abundance, diversity, configuration, and geographic distribution in relation to different disease-associated ecological factors. A series of significant correlations were observed between the prevalence of individual viruses and the disease-associated ecological factors. Our study aims to uncover novel ecological risk factors of bovine diarrheal disease by examining the pathogenic microorganism-host-environment disease ecology, thereby providing a new perspective on the control of bovine diarrheal diseases.
Keyphrases
  • risk factors
  • climate change
  • artificial intelligence
  • wastewater treatment
  • clostridium difficile
  • antibiotic resistance genes