AI Article Synopsis

  • This study explored how vitamin B2 supplementation affects the microbiome in broiler chicken caeca by using multi-omic analysis techniques to cluster features and analyze biological pathways.
  • Researchers found significant differences in the microbiome composition and metabolic pathways of chickens fed with 50 and 100 mg/kg of vitamin B2 compared to control groups, particularly noted at 14, 28, and 42 days.
  • Key findings showed that vitamin B2 supplementation led to beneficial taxonomic changes and increased production of important metabolites such as myo-inositol, formic acid, amino acids, and pyruvate in the caeca of the broilers.

Article Abstract

Background: The results of omic methodologies are often reported as separate datasets. In this study we applied for the first time multi-omic features clustering and pathway enrichment to clarify the biological impact of vitamin B2 supplementation on broiler caeca microbiome.

Methods: The caeca contents of broilers fed +50 and +100 mg/kg vitamin B2 were analyzed by shotgun metagenomic and metabolomic. Latent variables extracted from NMR spectra, as well as taxonomic and functional features profiled from metagenomes, were integrated to characterize the effect of vitamin B2 in modulating caeca microbiome. A pathway-based network was obtained by mapping the observed input genes and compounds, highlighting connected strands of metabolic ways through pathway-enrichment analysis.

Results: At day 14, the taxonomic, functional and metabolomic features in the caeca of tested broilers showed some degree of separation between control and treated groups, becoming fully clear at 28 days and persisting up to 42 days. In the caeca of birds belonging to the control group spp. was the signature species, while the signature species in the caeca of broilers fed +50 and +100 mg/kg vitamin B2 were and , , , spp., respectively. The pathway enrichment analysis highlighted that the specific biochemical pathways enhanced by the supplementations of vitamin B2 were N-Formyl-L-aspartate amidohydrolase, producing Aspartate and Formate; L-Alanine:2-oxoglutarate amino transferase, supporting the conversion of L-Alanine and 2-Oxoglutarate in Pyruvate and L-Glutamate; 1D-myo-inositol 1/4 phosphate phosphohydrolase, converting Inositol 1/4-phosphate and water in myo-Inositol and Orthophosphate. The results of this study demonstrated that the caeca of birds fed +50 and + 100 mg/kg were those characterized by taxonomic groups more beneficial to the host and with a higher concentration of myo-inositol, formic acid, amino acids and pyruvate involved in glycolysis and amino acid biosynthesis.

Conclusion: In this study we demonstrated how to perform multi-omic features integration to describe the biochemical mechanisms enhanced by the supplementation of different concentrations of vitamin B2 in the poultry diet. The relationship between vitamin B2 supplementation and myo-inositol production was highlighted in our study for the first time.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10568133PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fmicb.2023.1264361DOI Listing

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