Dietary Energy Levels Impact on Skin Microbiota and Metabolites of Yaks
Pengcheng Zhao, Bingang Shi, Xuelan Zhou, Zhidong Zhao, Jiang Hu, Xiaolan Zhang

TL;DR
This study shows that the diet of yaks affects their skin microbiome diversity and related metabolites, with low-energy diets promoting microbial diversity and stability.
Contribution
The study reveals how dietary energy levels influence yak skin microbiota diversity and specific metabolite pathways, linking microbial genera to skin metabolites.
Findings
Low-energy diets significantly increased skin microbiota alpha diversity in yaks compared to high-energy diets.
114 differentially expressed metabolites were identified, enriched in pathways like synaptic vesicle trafficking and glycerophospholipid metabolism.
Psychrobacter correlated with choline and Corynebacterium with palmitic acid, suggesting functional links between microbiota and metabolites.
Abstract
The study aims to investigate the skin microbiome composition of Yaks and the effects of different dietary nutrient levels on the skin microbiome diversity and metabolites. A total of 19 healthy Tianzhu White Yaks at two age stages (2.5 and 4.5 years old) were selected and fed either a high-energy diet (n = 9) or a low-energy diet (n = 10). After 90 days of feeding, skin microbiota and skin tissue metabolites were detected using 16S rRNA sequencing and LC-MS/MS untargeted metabolomics, respectively. The results showed: (1) the phyla Firmicutes, Actinobacteriota, Proteobacteria, and Bacteroidetes exhibited relatively high abundances in the skin of yaks, and the total abundance of these four phyla reached as high as 99.3%. Alpha diversity analysis indicated that the alpha diversity index of yak skin microbiota was significantly higher (p < 0.05) in the low-energy nutritional level group…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGut microbiota and health · Indigenous Studies and Ecology · Dermatology and Skin Diseases
