# Endometrial microbiome in mares with and without clinical endometritis

**Authors:** Lulu Guo, G. Reed Holyoak, Udaya DeSilva

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fvets.2025.1588432 · 2025-08-01

## TL;DR

This study compares the endometrial microbiomes of healthy and chronically inflamed mares, finding microbial imbalances linked to reproductive issues.

## Contribution

The study establishes a preliminary uterine microbiome reference for mares using sequencing-based profiling.

## Key findings

- Microbial diversity is significantly reduced in mares with chronic endometritis.
- Burkholderia, Hyphomicrobium, and Erwiniaceae are significantly enriched in chronic endometritis cases.
- Chronic endometritis microbiota show increased metabolism-related pathways compared to healthy mares.

## Abstract

Chronic endometritis (CE) is a major contributor to reproductive failure in mares and in many other mammals. Current diagnostic methods lack sensitivity due to the lack of pathognomonic clinical signs or ultrasound findings. Although microbial involvement was suggested, no definitive causative agents have been isolated, and the few studies conducted are compromised by the dependence on culturable aerobic organisms. This study compares the endometrial microbiomes of 13 healthy and 13 CE-diagnosed mares that were carefully matched to their locations and management. Microbial diversity was significantly reduced in CE mares, indicating dysbiosis. Burkholderia and Chlamydia were dominant in both groups but significantly more abundant in CE samples. Linear discriminant analysis revealed Burkholderia, Hyphomicrobium, and Erwiniaceae as significantly enriched in CE. Functional pathway analysis showed increased metabolism-related pathways in CE-associated microbiota, while healthy mares exhibited greater microbial richness and functional diversity. These findings underscore microbial imbalance as a potential driver of CE and highlight the utility of sequencing-based microbiome profiling for improved diagnosis and therapeutic targeting in equine reproductive health. This preliminary study contributes to establishing a uterine microbiome reference for mares, with implications for fertility management.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** chronic endometritis (MONDO:0024279)
- **Species:** Equus caballus (taxon 9796)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** reproductive failure (MESH:D051437), dysbiosis (MESH:D064806), CE (MESH:D004716)
- **Species:** Chlamydia (genus) [taxon 810], Burkholderia (genus) [taxon 32008], Equus caballus (domestic horse, species) [taxon 9796]

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12355929/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12355929