Liver abscesses caused by polymicrobial infections of the liver are a widespread problem in feedlot cattle production. There are currently no effective methods for the early detection of liver abscesses or to predict antibiotic efficacy. Although gene expression and microbiome differences have been reported in the rumen of abscessed and normal animals, liver abscess biomarkers using less invasive tools can facilitate managing of the disease in the field. Here we report the results of two studies measuring the fecal microbiome composition of steers that did or did not develop liver abscesses, with or without antibiotic treatment, along a 7-month feeding period on a high-concentrate diet. Our results indicate a limited impact of liver abscesses or tylosin on fecal microbiome composition, with time on diet explaining most variance in the fecal microbiome. Interestingly, in both studies, antibiotic treatment led to larger differences in both the composition and variance of the fecal microbiomes between abscessed and normal animals compared to controls. These differences were limited to specific sampling times in each of the two studies. Although multiple amplicon sequence variants with differential abundances according to liver abscess state were identified, there was no overlap between the two studies. Our results suggests that early fecal biomarkers of liver abscess susceptibility might be developed, especially for animals receiving preventative antibiotics, but the fecal abundance of individual microorganisms may not be a robust predictor across different sampling times or diet regimes.
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