Limited day-to-day variation in the canine gut microbiota: implications for microbiome studies

The gut microbiome is vital for health and affects gastrointestinal, systemic, and neurological functions. In dogs, fecal samples provide an effective mechanism to assess the gut microbiota as they are non-invasive, easily obtained, and representative of the gut microbiome. However, traditional meth...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: David Atuahene, Luke Wolfe, Oona Elisabet Vanhatalo, Benjamin T. Veenstra, Joseph H. Skarlupka, Katie L. Anderson, Garret Suen, Giorgia Meineri, Jessica C. Pritchard
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2025-07-01
Series:Frontiers in Veterinary Science
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Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fvets.2025.1632686/full
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Summary:The gut microbiome is vital for health and affects gastrointestinal, systemic, and neurological functions. In dogs, fecal samples provide an effective mechanism to assess the gut microbiota as they are non-invasive, easily obtained, and representative of the gut microbiome. However, traditional methods usually require sampling across three consecutive days per time point to minimize the presumed variation in the gut microbiome. Here, we sought to investigate whether the gut microbiome obtained from a single-day fecal sampling is reflective of the microbiome obtained from three-day collections. To accomplish this, we collected fecal samples from 12 dogs over 3 days and compared each single-day microbiome against the combined microbiotas of the three-day samples. We found no significant daily variation in the gut microbiota, as determined by two one-sided tests of equivalence (TOST) analysis, indicating that there are little to no day-to-day changes in the microbiota. Further microbial comparisons using PERMANOVA (p = 0.98) and non-metric multidimensional scaling also showed no significant differences in the microbial composition across the sampled days. Taken together, our findings suggest that a single sample can represent the gut microbiome as accurately as samples obtained across three consecutive days. As such, a single-day sampling approach can be used in dog microbiome studies, which would reduce both labor and costs while preserving overall data quality.
ISSN:2297-1769