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1.
PLoS One ; 11(4): e0154642, 2016.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27124615

ABSTRACT

In this study, we compared the effects of two diets containing different isoflavone concentrations on the isoflavone transfer from feed into milk and on the rumen microbiota in lactating dairy cows. The on-farm experiment was conducted on twelve lactating Czech Fleckvieh x Holstein cows divided into two groups, each with similar mean milk yield. Twice daily, cows were individually fed a diet based on maize silage, meadow hay and supplemental mixture. Control group (CTRL) received the basal diet while the experimental group (EXP) received the basal diet supplemented with 40% soybean isoflavone extract. The average daily isoflavone intake in the EXP group (16 g/day) was twice as high as that in the CTRL group (8.4 g/day, P<0.001). Total isoflavone concentrations in milk from the CTRL and EXP groups were 96.89 and 276.07 µg/L, respectively (P<0.001). Equol concentrations in milk increased from 77.78 µg/L in the CTRL group to 186.30 µg/L in the EXP group (P<0.001). The V3-4 region of bacterial 16S rRNA genes was used for metagenomic analysis of the rumen microbiome. The experimental cows exhibited fewer OTUs at a distance level of 0.03 compared to control cows (P<0.05) and reduced microbial richness compared to control cows based on the calculated Inverse Simpson and Shannon indices. Non-metric multidimensional scaling analysis showed that the major contributor to separation between the experimental and control groups were changes in the representation of bacteria belonging to the phyla Bacteroidetes, Proteobacteria, Firmicutes, and Planctomycetes. Surprisingly, a statistically significant positive correlation was found only between isoflavones and the phyla Burkholderiales (r = 0.65, P<0.05) and unclassified Betaproteobacteria (r = 0.58, P<0.05). Previous mouse and human studies of isoflavone effects on the composition of gastrointestinal microbial populations generally report similar findings.


Subject(s)
Animal Feed/analysis , Bacteria/classification , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Diet/veterinary , Dietary Supplements , Isoflavones/pharmacology , Milk/chemistry , Rumen/microbiology , Animal Nutritional Physiological Phenomena/drug effects , Animals , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteroidetes/genetics , Bacteroidetes/isolation & purification , Betaproteobacteria/genetics , Betaproteobacteria/isolation & purification , Burkholderiaceae/genetics , Burkholderiaceae/isolation & purification , Cattle , Female , Firmicutes/genetics , Firmicutes/isolation & purification , Lactation , Microbiota , Planctomycetales/genetics , Planctomycetales/isolation & purification , Plant Extracts , Poaceae , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Silage , Glycine max/metabolism , Zea mays
2.
Parasitol Int ; 56(3): 179-83, 2007 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17363320

ABSTRACT

Diplozoids (Diplozoidae, Monogenea) are fish ectoparasites with a direct life cycle without intermediate hosts. Their free swimming larva, the oncomiracidium, hatches from eggs, invades a fish host and metamorphoses into a post-oncomiracidial larval stage, the diporpa. Later, two diporpae fuse and live as a pair in cross-copulation during their adult life. An experimental study was designed to investigate the life cycle of Paradiplozoon homoion (Monogenea, Diplozoidae) parasitizing their common fish hosts, gudgeon (Gobio gobio). A total of 35 gudgeon parasitized by diplozoids were collected from their natural environment of the Vlára River, Czech Republic, and kept together in tanks with 41 non-parasitized gudgeons reared in a laboratory environment. In total, 100 adult specimens of P. homoion were collected from the Vlára River gudgeon and a new parasite generation was expected to be observed on fish reared in the laboratory environment. Eight days after the first diplozoid eggs appeared on fish gills, the presence of diporpae with one or two pairs of clamps was noted. The appearance of the first juveniles was recorded at the same time as diporpae. Development of P. homoion from egg to sexually mature adult stage took 33 days at a constant temperature of 20 degrees C. The development of eggs in adults of the second generation was observed 2 days after the first observation of these adults. The behavior of oncomiracidia was also studied and this free swimming stage of diplozoids survived for 22 h in the absence of a host. When host fish were experimentally infected by oncomiracidia, diporpae were found attached to the fish gill apparatus within 2 h of infection.


Subject(s)
Cyprinidae/parasitology , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Life Cycle Stages , Trematoda/growth & development , Trematoda/pathogenicity , Trematode Infections/veterinary , Animals , Host-Parasite Interactions , Trematode Infections/parasitology
3.
Dis Aquat Organ ; 69(2-3): 265-8, 2006 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16724572

ABSTRACT

A female specimen of the nematode Philometroides barbi Moravec, Simková, Hanzelová, Spakulová et Cakic, 2005, a little-known histozoic parasite of the Mediterranean Barbus meridionalis, was recorded from the fin of its fish host in Bulgaria. Scanning electron microscopical examination, used for the first time in this species, made it possible to determine the character of cephalic papillae (14 papillae arranged in 2 circles) and amphids and confirmed the presence of 4 large caudal lobes. These features distinctly distinguish P. barbi from Philometroides cyprini and other congeners parasitizing European fishes.


Subject(s)
Cyprinidae/parasitology , Dracunculoidea/classification , Dracunculoidea/ultrastructure , Fish Diseases/parasitology , Spirurida Infections/veterinary , Animals , Bulgaria , Dracunculoidea/isolation & purification , Female , Microscopy, Electron, Scanning/veterinary , Rivers , Spirurida Infections/parasitology
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