Substrate-Dependent Fermentation of Bamboo in Giant Panda Gut Microbiomes: Leaf Primarily to Ethanol and Pith to Lactate

The giant panda is known worldwide for having successfully moved to a diet almost exclusively based on bamboo. Provided that no lignocellulose-degrading enzyme was detected in panda's genome, bamboo digestion is believed to depend on its gut microbiome. However, pandas retain the digestive syst...

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Published inFrontiers in microbiology Vol. 11; p. 530
Main Authors Scoma, Alberto, Khor, Way Cern, Coma, Marta, Heyer, Robert, Props, Ruben, Schoelynck, Jonas, Bouts, Tim, Benndorf, Dirk, Li, Desheng, Zhang, Hemin, Rabaey, Korneel
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 31.03.2020
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Summary:The giant panda is known worldwide for having successfully moved to a diet almost exclusively based on bamboo. Provided that no lignocellulose-degrading enzyme was detected in panda's genome, bamboo digestion is believed to depend on its gut microbiome. However, pandas retain the digestive system of a carnivore, with retention times of maximum 12 h. Cultivation of their unique gut microbiome under controlled laboratory conditions may be a valid tool to understand giant pandas' dietary habits, and provide valuable insights about what component of lignocellulose may be metabolized. Here, we collected gut microbiomes from fresh fecal samples of a giant panda (either entirely green or yellow stools) and supplied them with green leaves or yellow pith (i.e., the peeled stem). Microbial community composition was substrate dependent, and resulted in markedly different fermentation profiles, with yellow pith fermented to lactate and green leaves to lactate, acetate and ethanol, the latter to strikingly high concentrations (∼3%, v:v, within 3.5 h). Microbial metaproteins pointed to hemicellulose rather than cellulose degradation. The alpha-amylase from the giant panda (E.C. 3.2.1.1) was the predominant identified metaprotein, particularly in reactors inoculated with pellets derived from fecal samples (up to 60%). Gut microbiomes assemblage was most prominently impacted by the change in substrate (either leaf or pith). Removal of soluble organics from inocula to force lignocellulose degradation significantly enriched (in green leaf) and / (in yellow pith). Overall, different substrates (either leaf or pith) markedly shaped gut microbiome assemblies and fermentation profiles. The biochemical profile of fermentation products may be an underestimated factor contributing to explain the peculiar dietary behavior of giant pandas, and should be implemented in large scale studies together with short-term lab-scale cultivation of gut microbiomes.
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Reviewed by: Tommi Vatanen, The University of Auckland, New Zealand; Largus Angenent, University of Tübingen, Germany; Mitja Nandi Paul Remus-Emsermann, University of Canterbury, New Zealand
This article was submitted to Microbial Physiology and Metabolism, a section of the journal Frontiers in Microbiology
This study is dedicated to the memory of Way Cern Khor, a hard-working, passionate young scientist and a dear friend
Edited by: Haike Antelmann, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany
ISSN:1664-302X
1664-302X
DOI:10.3389/fmicb.2020.00530