U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

Links from BioSample

SRX15159314: 16S sequencing of Felis catus: Gut microbiome
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina MiSeq) run: 119,598 spots, 72M bases, 46.6Mb downloads

Design: 16S amplicon sequencing of feline gut and upper respiratory microbiomes
Submitted by: Oregon State University
Study: Chronic clinical signs of upper respiratory tract disease shape gut and respiratory microbiomes in cohabitating domestic felines.
show Abstracthide Abstract
Feline upper respiratory tract disease (FURTD), often caused by infections etiologies, is a multifactorial syndrome affecting feline populations worldwide. Because of its highly transmissible nature, infectious FURTD is most prevalent anywhere cats are housed in groups such as animal shelters, and is associated with negative consequences such as decreasing adoption rates, intensifying care costs, and increasing euthanasia rates. Understanding the etiology and pathophysiology of FURTD is thus essential to best mitigate the negative consequences of this disease. Clinical signs of FURTD include acute respiratory disease, with a small fraction of cats developing chronic sequelae. It is thought that nasal mucosal microbiome changes play an active role in the development of acute clinical signs, but it remains unknown if the microbiome may play a role in the development and progression of chronic clinical disease. To address the knowledge gap surrounding how microbiomes link to chronic FURTD, we asked if microbial community structure of upper respiratory and gut microbiomes differed between cats with chronic FURTD signs and clinically normal cats. We selected 8 households with at least one cat exhibiting chronic clinical FURTD, and simultaneously collected samples from cohabitating clinically normal cats. Microbial community structure was assessed via 16S rDNA sequencing of both gut and nasal microbiome communities. Using a previously described ecophylogenetic method, we identified 37 and 27 microbial lineages within gut and nasal microbiomes respectively that significantly associated with presence of active FURTD clinical signs in cats with a history of chronic signs. Overall, we find that nasal and gut microbial communities may contribute to the development of chronic clinical course, but more research is needed to confirm our observations.
Sample:
SAMN28094904 • SRS12901707 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Name: Cat13_G
Instrument: Illumina MiSeq
Strategy: AMPLICON
Source: METAGENOMIC
Selection: PCR
Layout: PAIRED
Runs: 1 run, 119,598 spots, 72M bases, 46.6Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR19089649119,59872M46.6Mb2022-10-19

ID:
21637165

Supplemental Content

Recent activity

Your browsing activity is empty.

Activity recording is turned off.

Turn recording back on

See more...