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The association of hyperketonemia with fecal and rumen microbiota at time of diagnosis in a case-control cohort of early lactation cows.

Asha M MilesJessica A A McArtSvetlana F LimaRafael C NevesErika Ganda
Published in: BMC veterinary research (2022)
Lower relative abundance of Ruminococcus 2 in C-HYK cow rumens was observed, suggesting these cows may be less efficient at degrading cellulose although the mechanistic role of Ruminococcus spp. in rumen metabolism is not completely understood. Substantial differences in fecal or rumen microbiomes among cows experiencing different levels of energy deficit were not observed, suggesting that hyperketonemia may not be greatly influenced by gut microbial composition, and vice versa. Further studies using higher resolution -omics approaches like meta-transcriptomics or meta-proteomics are needed to decipher the exact mechanisms at play.
Keyphrases
  • case control
  • single cell
  • dairy cows
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule
  • density functional theory