Animal Microbiology Part I Flashcards
How can commensal bacteria be beneficial?
How can commensals be harmful?
Provide host with vitamins and metabolic pathways
Provide protection via competition against new incoming microbial populations
Teach the immune system
But commensals of one species may be pathogenic/parasitic in another or under certain conditions
Herbivore digestion
Herbivores rely on foods rich in insoluble polysaccharides: cellulose, lignin, hemicellulose and pectin
Animals lack cellulase themselves - only the microbes have cellulose and digest cellulose to provide host with nutrients (mutualistic)
Foregut and hindgut fermentation chambers
Foregut vs. Hindgut fermentation chambers
Foregut: fermentation chamber (rumen) precedes acidic stomach
- Ex. ruminants, colobine monkeys, marsupials, hoatzin
Hindgut: cecum or large intestine used as fermentation chamber
Note: appendix is remnant of a cecum in humans
Rumen
Digestion
Energy source for ruminants
Food chewed minimally –> rumen –> more chewing
- Small particles then move on to omasum
- 39-40°C inside rumen, anaerobic
- pH 5-7, maintained by saliva with sodium bicarb + sodium phosphate
Contains cellulolytic microbes such as Ruminococcus as well as non-cellulolytic which also feed off nutrients/sugars released (not mutualistic)
Sugars are fermented to produce volatile fatty acids (acetic, butyric, propionic acids) + CH4 (methanogens) + CO2
- FA pass into bloodstream from rumen and act as main energy source for ruminants
Cellulosomes
Outside microbes such as Ruminococcus
Collection of 9 cellulase enzymes to degrade large cellulose polymers
Energy loss in feeding ruminants
10% energy lost as acetate used by methanogens which produce CH4 and is burped up by cows
Monensin (antibiotic) inhibits methanogenesis and can be added to feeds to reduce CH4 production (good for environment)
Digestion beyond the rumen in ruminants
Small particles move from rumen –> reticulum –> omasum
Excess water is collected in omasum
Food material + microbial mass moves from omasum –> abomasum –> intestines
- microbes serve as major source of AA and vitamins
Hindgut fermentation
Fermentation occurs in the cecum which is between the SI and large intestine
Microbial mass is not digested but excreted and thus have higher AA/vitamin requirements
- some animals like rabbits and hares consume fecal pellets called coprophagy if they need the nutrients
Hawaiian Bobtail Squid symbiosis
Mutualistic symbiosis between Aliivibrio fischeri and hawaiian bobtail squid
A. fischeri is bioluminescent and squid houses large population in light organ
- A fischeri emit light which resembles moonlight to camouflage the squid from predators
Horizontal transmission between individuals
Termites example of symbiosis
Diverse community of anaerobes with cellulolytic capacity such as Ruminococcus live within gut of termintes in symbiotic relationship
Termites are then able to decompose cellulose and hemicellulose and receive acetate waste product for energy