[an error occurred while processing this directive]

Hereditas(Beijing) ›› 2025, Vol. 47 ›› Issue (10): 1146-1155.doi: 10.16288/j.yczz.25-027

• Research Article • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Study on the microbial diversity and composition at different regions of stomach in adult pigs

Siyu Hu1(), Ruohan Yang1, Zhengjiang Liu1, Yifei Cai1, Juan Deng2,3, Bo Zeng2,3, Mingzhou Li2,3(), Fanli Kong1,2,3()   

  1. 1. College of Life Sciences, Sichuan Agricultural University, Ya'an 625014, China
    2. State Key Laboratory of Pig and Poultry Breeding, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu 611130, China
    3. Livestock and Poultry Multi-omics Key Laboratory of Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, College of Animal Science and Technology, Sichuan Agricultural University, Chengdu 611130, China
  • Received:2025-03-19 Revised:2025-06-04 Online:2025-10-20 Published:2025-06-06
  • Contact: Mingzhou Li, Fanli Kong E-mail:LuweiSong05@163.com;mingzhou.li@sicau.edu.cn;fkong@sicau.edu.cn
  • Supported by:
    National Key R & D Program of China(2022YFF1000100);National Natural Science Foundation of China(32202630);National Natural Science Foundation of China(32302700);National Natural Science Foundation of China(32421005);Sichuan Science and Technology Program(2021ZDZX0008);Sichuan Science and Technology Program(2021YFYZ0009);China Postdoctoral Science Foundation(2023M732512);Open Project Program of International Joint Research Laboratory in Universities of Jiangsu Province of China for Domestic Animal Germplasm Resources and Genetic Improvement(IJRLD-KF202202)

Abstract:

To investigate the microbial composition and diversity across distinct anatomical regions of the porcine stomach, this study took adult “Landrace×Yorkshire” hybrid pigs as the research subjects. Mucosal samples were collected from eight regions, including gastroesophageal groove, gastric fundus, lesser curvature of the gastric body, greater curvature of the gastric body, middle antrum of the gastric antrum, gastric diverticulum, round pillow of the pylorus, and pylorus, and subjected by high-throughput sequencing targeting the microbial 16S rRNA V3-V4 hypervariable regions. The results showed obvious difference in microbial diversity among the eight stomach regions. The gastric fundus and gastric body greater curvature exhibited higher microbial diversity and richness, while the esophageal groove, gastric body lesser curvature, gastric antrum middle section, gastric diverticulum, pyloric bulge, and pylorus showed lower diversity and richness. Firmicutes and Proteobacteria constituted the predominant phyla across all eight regions of the pig stomach. A` relatively high abundance of Cyanobacteria was also detected in the esophageal groove and gastric antrum middle section. However, the dominant genera varied substantially across regions. Lactobacillus predominated in the esophageal groove, fundus, lesser curvature, and greater curvature. Delftia and Chryseobacterium were dominant in the mid-antrum. Bacteroides dominated in the gastric diverticulum and pylorus. Proteus was the dominant genus in the pyloric torus. Further functional analysis of stomach microbiome indicated the regions with the most active metabolic processes and cellular activity within the stomach were the esophageal groove and lesser curvature of the gastric body. These findings provide valuable reference data for future research on the physiological structure and function of the stomach.

Key words: pig, stomach, mucosal microbiota, microbial diversity, 16S amplicon high-throughput sequencing