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. 2023 Sep 13;18(9):e0291243.
doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291243. eCollection 2023.

The extent of nitrogen isotopic fractionation in rumen bacteria is associated with changes in rumen nitrogen metabolism

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The extent of nitrogen isotopic fractionation in rumen bacteria is associated with changes in rumen nitrogen metabolism

Gonzalo Cantalapiedra-Hijar et al. PLoS One. .

Abstract

Nitrogen use efficiency is an important index in ruminants and can be indirectly evaluated through the N isotopic discrimination between the animal and its diet (Δ15Nanimal-diet). The concentration and source of N may determine both the extent of the N isotopic discrimination in bacteria and N use efficiency. We hypothesised that the uptake and release of ammonia by rumen bacteria will affect the natural 15N enrichment of the bacterial biomass over their substrates (Δ15Nbacteria-substrate) and thereby further impacting Δ15Nanimal-diet. To test this hypothesis, two independent in vitro experiments were conducted using two contrasting N sources (organic vs inorganic) at different levels either in pure rumen bacteria culture incubations (Experiment #1) or in mixed rumen cultures (Experiment #2). In Experiment #1, tryptone casein or ammonium chloride were tested at low (1 mM N) and high (11.5 mM N) concentrations on three rumen bacterial strains (Fibrobacter succinogenes, Eubacterium limosum and Xylanibacter ruminicola) incubated in triplicate in anaerobic batch monocultures during 48h. In Experiment #2 mixed rumen cultures were incubated during 120 h with peptone or ammonium chloride at five different levels of N (1.5, 3, 4.5, 6 and 12-mM). In experiment #1, Δ15Nbacteria-substrate was lowest when the ammonia-consumer bacterium Fibrobacter succinogenes was grown on ammonium chloride, and highest when the proteolytic bacterial strain Xylanibacter ruminicola was grown on tryptone. In experiment #2, Δ15Nbacteria-substrate was lower with inorganic (ammonium chloride) vs organic (peptone) N source. A strong negative correlation between Δ15Nbacteria-substrate and Rikenellaceae_RC9_gut_group, a potential fibrolytic rumen bacterium, was detected. Together, our results showed that Δ15Nbacteria-substrate may change according to the balance between synthesis of microbial protein from ammonia versus non-ammonia N sources and confirm the key role of rumen bacteria as modulators of Δ15Nanimal-diet.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Figures

Fig 1
Fig 1. Isotopic N discrimination between the pure bacteria and their substrates in in vitro cultures using different N sources (tryptone [organic] vs ammonium [inorganic]) and levels (low [1.5 mM] vs high [11.5 mM]) in trial 1.
Negative values correspond to bacteria pellets depleted in 15N relative to their substrates.
Fig 2
Fig 2
Clustering analysis using a heatmap based on the selected bacterial ASVs correlating to Δ15N when peptone (A) or ammonium chloride (B) were used as nitrogen source. Regression plots of key ASVs correlating to Δ15N for peptone (C) and ammonium chloride (D). Experiment #2.

References

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