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1.
PLoS One ; 18(6): e0287145, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37294797

ABSTRACT

Fenbendazole (FBZ) is a common antiparasitic treatment used in research rodent colonies for biosecurity purposes. The effect of this compound has been studied in C57 mice, but never before in a strain of mice that has co-morbidities, such as the blood pressure high (BPH)/5. The BPH/5 mouse is an inbred genetic model of hypertension. While both male and female BPH/5 have high blood pressure, there is a metabolic sexual dimorphism with females displaying key features of obesity. The obese gut microbiome has been linked to hypertension. Therefore, we hypothesized that fenbendazole treatment will alter the gut microbiome in hypertensive mice in a sex dependent manner. To test the influence of FBZ on the BPH/5 gut microbiota, fecal samples were collected pre- and post-treatment from adult BPH/5 mice (males and non-pregnant females). The mice were treated with fenbendazole impregnated feed for five weeks. Post-treatment feces were collected at the end of the treatment period and DNA was extracted, and the V4 region of 16S rRNA was amplified and sequenced using the Illumina MiSeq system. The purpose was to analyze the fecal microbiome before and after FBZ treatment, the results demonstrate changes with treatment in a sex dependent manner. More specifically, differences in community composition were detected in BPH/5 non-pregnant female and males using Bray-Curtis dissimilarity as a measure of beta-diversity (treatment p = 0.002). The ratio of Firmicutes to Bacteroidetes, which has been identified in cases of obesity, was not altered. Yet, Verrucomicrobia was increased in BPH/5 males and females post-treatment and was significantly different by sex (treatment p = 5.85e-05, sex p = 0.0151, and interaction p = 0.045), while Actinobacteria was decreased in the post-treatment mice (treatment p = 0.00017, sex p = 0.5, interaction p = 0.2). These results are indicative of gut dysbiosis compared to pre-treatment controls. Lactobacillus was decreased with FBZ treatment in BPH/5 females only. In conclusion, fenbendazole does alter the gut microbial communities, most notable in the male rather than female BPH/5 mouse. This provides evidence that caution should be taken when providing any gut altering treatments before or during mouse experiments.


Subject(s)
Hypertension , Microbiota , Animals , Female , Male , Mice , Blood Pressure , Feces/microbiology , Fenbendazole/pharmacology , Fenbendazole/therapeutic use , Hypertension/drug therapy , Obesity/drug therapy , Obesity/microbiology , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics
2.
Animals (Basel) ; 13(12)2023 Jun 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37370509

ABSTRACT

Placentitis is the leading cause of infectious abortion in the horse. Additionally, it can result in weak and/or growth restricted offspring. While the etiology of ascending placentitis is well described in mares, less is known regarding the pathogenesis of other types, such as nocardioform placentitis. This study aims to identify the microbial communities in different body sites of the pregnant mare in early gestation to establish a core microbiome that may be perturbed in pathologic pregnancies such as placentitis. We hypothesize that the equine placenta harbors a distinct resident microbiome in early pregnancy when characterized by metagenetics and that there will be a disparity in bacterial communities from the oral, vaginal, and fecal microbiome. Samples were collected from the oral cavity, vagina, anus, and the allantoic portion of the allantochorion ("placenta") from five pregnant mares between 96 and 120 days of gestation. The V4 region of the 16S rRNA gene was amplified for Illumina MiSeq sequencing to examine core bacterial communities present in the different body sites. Microbial community composition of the pregnant ponies by body site was significantly different (Bray-Curtis dissimilarity). The placenta was significantly different from the feces, oral cavity, and vagina. Alpha diversity measuring the Shannon diversity matrix was significant, with the body sites being a compounding variable, meaning there was a difference in richness and evenness in the different microbial communities. Feces had the greatest alpha diversity, while the oral cavity and placenta similarly had the least. In conclusion, metagenetics did reveal distinct community differences in the oral, fecal, vaginal, and placenta cavities of the horse. The equine placenta does show similarities in its microbial communities to the oral cavity. Further research needs to be completed to investigate how bacteria may be translocated to the placenta from these other body sites and how they contribute to the development of placentitis.

3.
Physiol Rep ; 10(17): e15444, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36065848

ABSTRACT

AbstractPreeclampsia (PE) is a hypertensive disorder that impacts 2-8% of pregnant women worldwide. It is characterized by new onset hypertension during the second half of gestation and is a leading cause of maternal and fetal morbidity/mortality. Maternal obesity increases the risk of PE and is a key predictor of childhood obesity and potentially offspring cardiometabolic complications in a sex-dependent manner. The influence of the maternal obesogenic environment, with superimposed PE, on offspring development into adulthood is unknown. Obese BPH/5 mice spontaneously exhibit late-gestational hypertension, fetal demise and growth restriction, and excessive gestational weight gain. BPH/5 females have improved pregnancy outcomes when maternal weight loss via pair-feeding is imposed beginning at conception. We hypothesized that phenotypic differences between female and male BPH/5 offspring can be influenced by pair feeding BPH/5 dams during pregnancy. BPH/5 pair-fed dams have improved litter sizes and increased fetal body weights. BPH/5 offspring born to ad libitum dams have similar sex ratios, body weights, and fecal microbiome as well as increased blood pressure that is reduced in the dam pair-fed offspring. Both BPH/5 male and female offspring born to pair-fed dams have a reduction in adiposity and an altered gut microbiome, while only female offspring born to pair-fed dams have decreased circulating leptin and white adipose tissue inflammatory cytokines. These sexually dimorphic results suggest that reduction in the maternal obesogenic environment in early pregnancy may play a greater role in female BPH/5 sex-dependent cardiometabolic outcomes than males. Reprograming females may mitigate the transgenerational progression of cardiometabolic disease.


Subject(s)
Hypertension , Pre-Eclampsia , Prenatal Exposure Delayed Effects , Animals , Female , Male , Mice , Pregnancy , Body Weight , Disease Models, Animal , Weight Gain , Weight Loss
4.
PLoS One ; 12(11): e0187044, 2017.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29091944

ABSTRACT

Advances have been made to standardize 16S rRNA gene amplicon based studies for inter-study comparisons, yet there are many opportunities for systematic error that may render these comparisons improper and misleading. The fecal microbiome of horses has been examined previously, however, no universal horse fecal collection method and sample processing procedure has been established. This study was initialized in large part to ensure that samples collected by different individuals from different geographical areas (i.e., crowdsourced) were not contaminated due to less than optimal sampling or holding conditions. In this study, we examined the effect of sampling the surface of fecal pellets compared to homogenized fecal pellets, and also the effect of time of sampling after defecation on 'bloom' taxa (bloom taxa refers to microbial taxa that can grow rapidly in horse feces post-defecation) using v4 16S rRNA amplicon libraries. A total of 1,440,171 sequences were recovered from 65 horse fecal samples yielding a total of 3,422 OTUs at 97% similarity. Sampling from either surface or homogenized feces had no effect on diversity and little effect on microbial composition. Sampling at various time points (0, 2, 4, 6, 12 h) had a significant effect on both diversity and community composition of fecal samples. Alpha diversity (Shannon index) initially increased with time as regrowth taxa were detected in the amplicon libraries, but by 12 h the diversity sharply decreased as the community composition became dominated by a few bloom families, including Bacillaceae, Planococcaeae, and Enterococcaceae, and other families to a lesser extent. The results show that immediate sampling of horse feces must be done in order to ensure accurate representation of horse fecal samples. Also, several of the bloom taxa found in this study are known to occur in human and cattle feces post defecation. The dominance of these taxa in feces shortly after defecation suggests that the feces is an important habitat for these organisms, and horse fecal samples that were improperly stored can be identified by presence of bloom taxa.


Subject(s)
Feces/microbiology , Microbiota , Animals , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/isolation & purification , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Horses , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics
5.
J Water Health ; 9(1): 117-27, 2011 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21301120

ABSTRACT

Faecal coliform (FC) concentration was monitored weekly in the Tangipahoa River over an eight year period. Available USGS discharge and precipitation data were used to construct a nonparametric multiplicative regression (NPMR) model for both forecasting and backcasting of FC density. NPMR backcasting and forecasting of FC allowed for estimation of concentration for any flow regime. During this study a remediation effort was undertaken to improve disinfection systems of contributing municipal waste water treatment plants in the watershed. Time-series analysis of FC concentrations demonstrated a drop in FC levels coinciding with remediation efforts. The NPMR model suggested the reduction in FC levels was not due to climate variance (i.e. discharge and precipitation changes) alone. Use of the NPMR method circumvented the need for construction of a more complex physical watershed model to estimate FC loading in the river. This method can be used to detect and estimate new discharge impacts, or forecast daily FC estimates.


Subject(s)
Colony Count, Microbial/methods , Enterobacteriaceae/isolation & purification , Environmental Monitoring/methods , Feces/microbiology , Rivers/microbiology , Water Supply/analysis , Conservation of Natural Resources , Humans , Louisiana , Models, Theoretical , Risk Assessment , Water Movements , Water Pollution/analysis , Weather
6.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 77(8): 2563-72, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21278280

ABSTRACT

Bacteroidales are attractive as water quality indicators because of their potential to discern sources of fecal pollution, and it is presumed that these bacteria do not multiply outside their host organisms. The persistence of a fecal Bacteroidales marker was monitored over 14 days in river water microcosms that varied in temperature from 10°C to 30°C and salinity from 0‰ to 30‰ by quantitative PCR (qPCR). Decay rates were estimated and compared to the results of other studies examining the survival and persistence of Bacteroidales markers by converting decay rates from other studies to a common decay rate unit. The log-linear decay rates estimated in this work ranged from -0.18 to -1.31 ln(C(T)/C(0)) day(-1), where C(T) is the threshold cycle and C(0) is the concentration of cells at time zero, which is comparable to findings in previous studies. Salinity had a positive effect on Bacteroidales marker persistence, while decay was more rapid at higher temperatures. Comparison of 16S rRNA gene clone libraries generated from microcosm samples indicated that most of the operational taxonomic unit (OTU) and phylogenetic diversity was found within samples and not between samples, indicating at least qualitatively that diverse lineages persist and likely have similar survival characteristics under most of the conditions examined. It was noted that the samples at higher salinities also had the smallest amount of diversity between samples as well as the lowest decay rates. This research also highlights the need for a repository of raw survival and persistence data if more sophisticated models of decay are to be employed and compared between different studies.


Subject(s)
Bacteroides/physiology , Feces/chemistry , Feces/microbiology , Hot Temperature , Salinity , Bacteroides/genetics , Biomarkers/analysis , Fresh Water/microbiology , Host Specificity , Molecular Sequence Data , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/analysis , Sewage/microbiology , Survival Analysis , Water Pollutants/analysis , Water Pollution
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