Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-12-2022
Keywords
Cattle, bovine respiratory disease, microbiota, biogeography, host-microbial interaction, pneumonia
Abstract
Bovine respiratory disease (BRD), as one of the most common and costly diseases in the beef cattle industry, has significant adverse impacts on global food security and the economic stability of the industry. The bovine respiratory microbiome is strongly associated with health and disease and may provide insights for alternative therapy when treating BRD. The niche-specific microbiome communities that colonize the inter-surface of the upper and the lower respiratory tract consist of a dynamic and complex ecological system. The correlation between the disequilibrium in the respiratory ecosystem and BRD has become a hot research topic. Hence, we summarize the pathogenesis and clinical signs of BRD and the alteration of the respiratory microbiota. Current research techniques and the biogeography of the microbiome in the healthy respiratory tract are also reviewed. We discuss the process of resident microbiota and pathogen colonization as well as the host immune response. Although associations between the microbiota and BRD have been revealed to some extent, interpreting the development of BRD in relation to respiratory microbial dysbiosis will likely be the direction for upcoming studies, which will allow us to better understand the importance of the airway microbiome and its contributions to animal health and performance.
Citation
Chai, J., Capik, S. F., Kegley, B., Richeson, J. T., Powell, J. G., & Zhao, J. (2022). Bovine Respiratory Microbiota of Feedlot Cattle and its Association with Disease. Veterinary Research, 53 https://doi.org/10.1186/s13567-021-01020-x
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Included in
Animal Experimentation and Research Commons, Beef Science Commons, Cell Biology Commons, Food Microbiology Commons, Meat Science Commons, Zoology Commons
Comments
This article was published with support from the Open Access Publishing Fund administered through the University of Arkansas Libraries.