Abstract :
Bacteria attached to the rumen epithelium (or epimural community) are not well characterised and their role in rumen
functioning is not totally understood. There is just one published report of a clone library from one cow that suggests that this
epimural community differs from the bacteria associated with the rumen digestive contents. However, this time-consuming
approach is not adapted for examining microbial population changes in groups of animals. In in vivo studies, when samples
from several animals have to be analysed simultaneously, a simpler technique has to be used. In this study, a genetic
fingerprinting technique, polymerase chain reaction-denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis (PCR-DGGE), was used to
characterise the structure of the bacterial population attached to the rumen epithelium. This community was compared with
that present in the solid and liquid phases of rumen content under two contrasting diets. Rumen samples were obtained from
four forage-fed and four high-concentrate-fed (80 : 20, wheat grain : hay) 5-month-old lambs. After slaughter, samples from five
epithelial sites and the solid and liquid digesta phases were taken for DNA extraction and analysis. Bacterial communities were
profiled by PCR-DGGE using bacterial-specific 16S rDNA primers. Analysis of the fingerprint revealed that the epithelial
community differed from those of rumen content in both diets. As expected, the nature of the feed influenced the bacterial
communities from the solid and liquid rumen phases but no diet effect was observed in the rumen epithelial profiles suggesting
a strong host effect on this bacterial population. Additionally, no differences were observed among the five epithelial sampling
sites taken from each animal. The profile of the bacterial population attached to the rumen epithelium presented a high interanimal
variation, whether this difference has an influence in the function of this community remains to be determined.
Keywords :
bacterial epimural community , Diversity , rumen bacteria , DGGE