logo
Loading...
Bayesian modeling reveals host genetics associated with rumen microbiota jointly influence methane emission in dairy cows

Agriculture

Bayesian modeling reveals host genetics associated with rumen microbiota jointly influence methane emission in dairy cows

Q. Zhang, G. Difford, et al.

Discover how cutting-edge research by Qianqian Zhang and colleagues uncovers the genetic and microbial factors influencing methane emissions in dairy cows. This innovative study offers insights into breeding strategies that could significantly reduce environmental impact.... show more
Abstract
Reducing methane emissions from livestock production is of great importance for the sustainable management of the Earth’s environment. Rumen microbiota play an important role in producing biogenic methane. However, knowledge of how host genetics influences variation in ruminal microbiota and their joint effects on methane emission is limited. We analyzed data from 750 dairy cows, using a Bayesian model to simultaneously assess the impact of host genetics and microbiota on host methane emission. We estimated that host genetics and microbiota explained 24% and 7%, respectively, of variation in host methane levels. In this Bayesian model, one bacterial genus explained up to 1.6% of the total microbiota variance. Further analysis was performed by a mixed linear model to estimate variance explained by host genomics in abundances of microbial genera and operational taxonomic units (OTU). Highest estimates were observed for a bacterial OTU with 33%, for an archaeal OTU with 26%, and for a microbial genus with 41% heritability. However, after multiple testing correction for the number of genera and OTUs modeled, none of the effects remained significant. We also used a mixed linear model to test effects of individual host genetic markers on microbial genera and OTUs. In this analysis, genetic markers inside host genes ABS4 and DNAJC10 were found associated with microbiota composition. We show that a Bayesian model can be utilized to model complex structure and relationship between microbiota simultaneously and their interaction with host genetics on methane emission. The host genome explains a significant fraction of between-individual variation in microbial abundance. Individual microbial taxonomic groups each only explain a small amount of variation in methane emissions. The identification of genes and genetic markers suggests that it is possible to design strategies for breeding cows with desired microbiota composition associated with phenotypes.
Publisher
Springer Nature
Published On
May 04, 2020
Authors
Qianqian Zhang, Gareth Difford, Goutam Sahana, Peter Løvendahl, Jan Lassen, Mogens Sandø Lund, Bernt Guldbrandtsen, Luc Janss
Tags
methane emissions
livestock
dairy cows
host genetics
rumen microbiota
breeding strategies
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny