Cardiff School of Biosciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, Wales CF103TL, UK.
BMC Microbiol. 2009 Dec 7;9:251. doi: 10.1186/1471-2180-9-251.
The Lactic Acid Bacteria (LAB) are important components of the healthy gut flora and have been used extensively as probiotics. Understanding the cultivable diversity of LAB before and after probiotic administration, and being able to track the fate of administered probiotic isolates during feeding are important parameters to consider in the design of clinical trials to assess probiotic efficacy. Several methods may be used to identify bacteria at the strain level, however, PCR-based methods such as Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) are particularly suited to rapid analysis. We examined the cultivable diversity of LAB in the human gut before and after feeding with two Lactobacillus strains, and also tracked the fate of these two administered strains using a RAPD technique.
A RAPD typing scheme was developed to genetically type LAB isolates from a wide range of species, and optimised for direct application to bacterial colony growth. A high-throughput strategy for fingerprinting the cultivable diversity of human faeces was developed and used to determine: (i) the initial cultivable LAB strain diversity in the human gut, and (ii) the fate of two Lactobacillus strains (Lactobacillus salivarius NCIMB 30211 and Lactobacillus acidophilus NCIMB 30156) contained within a capsule that was administered in a small-scale human feeding study. The L. salivarius strain was not cultivated from the faeces of any of the 12 volunteers prior to capsule administration, but appeared post-feeding in four. Strains matching the L. acidophilus NCIMB 30156 feeding strain were found in the faeces of three volunteers prior to consumption; after taking the Lactobacillus capsule, 10 of the 12 volunteers were culture positive for this strain. The appearance of both Lactobacillus strains during capsule consumption was statistically significant (p < 0.05).
We have shown that genetic strain typing of the cultivable human gut microbiota can be evaluated using a high throughput RAPD technique based on single bacterial colonies. Validation of this strategy paves the way for future systematic studies on the fate and efficacy of bacterial probiotics during human clinical trials.
乳酸菌(LAB)是健康肠道菌群的重要组成部分,已被广泛用作益生菌。了解益生菌给药前后可培养的 LAB 多样性,并能够跟踪给药益生菌分离株在喂养过程中的命运,是评估益生菌功效的临床试验设计中需要考虑的重要参数。可以使用几种方法在菌株水平上鉴定细菌,但是,基于 PCR 的方法(如随机扩增多态性 DNA(RAPD))特别适合快速分析。我们在用两种乳杆菌菌株喂养前后检查了人类肠道中可培养的 LAB 多样性,并使用 RAPD 技术跟踪了这两种给药菌株的命运。
开发了一种 RAPD 分型方案,用于对来自多种物种的 LAB 分离株进行基因分型,并针对直接应用于细菌菌落生长进行了优化。开发了一种高通量策略来指纹图谱人类粪便中可培养的多样性,并用于确定:(i)人类肠道中初始可培养 LAB 菌株多样性,(ii)胶囊中包含的两种乳杆菌菌株(唾液乳杆菌 NCIMB 30211 和嗜酸乳杆菌 NCIMB 30156)的命运,该胶囊在小型人体喂养研究中给予。在给予胶囊之前,没有从 12 名志愿者中的任何一名志愿者的粪便中培养出 L. salivarius 菌株,但在给予胶囊后有 4 名志愿者中出现。在消耗乳酸菌胶囊之前,三名志愿者的粪便中发现与 L. acidophilus NCIMB 30156 喂养株相匹配的菌株;在服用乳酸菌胶囊后,12 名志愿者中有 10 名对该菌株呈培养阳性。在胶囊消耗过程中两种乳杆菌菌株的出现具有统计学意义(p <0.05)。
我们已经表明,使用基于单个细菌菌落的高通量 RAPD 技术可以评估可培养的人类肠道微生物组的遗传菌株分型。该策略的验证为未来在人类临床试验中对细菌益生菌的命运和功效进行系统研究铺平了道路。