Ericsson Aaron Conrad, Davis Daniel John, Franklin Craig Lawrence, Hagan Catherine Elizabeth
Mutant Mouse Resource and Research Center, Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri; University of Missouri Metagenomics Center (MUMC), University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri; and Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri
Department of Veterinary Pathobiology, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
Physiol Genomics. 2015 Jul;47(7):243-52. doi: 10.1152/physiolgenomics.00010.2015. Epub 2015 Apr 7.
Electrotaxis, directional cell movement in response to an electric potential, has been demonstrated in a wide range of cell types including lymphocytes. Exoelectrogens, microorganisms capable of generating electrical currents, have been identified in microbial fuel cells. However, no studies have investigated exoelectrogenic microbes in fresh feces or the effects of an exoelectrogenic microbiota on the host organism. Here we show that commensal gut microbial populations differ in their capacity for electrical current production by exoelectrogens and that those differences are predictive of increased lymphocyte trafficking to the gut in vivo, despite the lack of increased production of canonical lymphocyte-specific chemokines. Additionally, we demonstrate that the difference in current production between mice purchased from different commercial sources correlates reproducibly with the presence or absence of segmented filamentous bacteria, and while our data do not support a direct role for segmented filamentous bacteria in ex vivo current production, an exoelectrogenic microbiota can be transferred in vivo via mucosa-associated bacteria present in the ileum. Moreover, we detect upregulation of microbial genes associated with extracellular electron transfer in feces of mice colonized with exoelectrogenic microbiota containing segmented filamentous bacteria. While still correlative, these results suggest a novel means by which the gut microbiota modulates the recruitment of cells of the immune system to the gut.
趋电运动,即细胞响应电势而进行的定向移动,已在包括淋巴细胞在内的多种细胞类型中得到证实。产电微生物是能够产生电流的微生物,已在微生物燃料电池中被鉴定出来。然而,尚无研究调查新鲜粪便中产电微生物或产电微生物群对宿主生物体的影响。在此,我们表明共生肠道微生物群体在产电微生物产生电流的能力方面存在差异,并且尽管缺乏典型淋巴细胞特异性趋化因子产量的增加,但这些差异可预测体内淋巴细胞向肠道的迁移增加。此外,我们证明从不同商业来源购买的小鼠之间电流产生的差异与分节丝状菌的存在与否可重复相关,虽然我们的数据不支持分节丝状菌在体外电流产生中起直接作用,但产电微生物群可通过回肠中存在的黏膜相关细菌在体内转移。此外,我们在定殖有含分节丝状菌的产电微生物群的小鼠粪便中检测到与细胞外电子转移相关的微生物基因上调。虽然仍是相关性的,但这些结果提示了肠道微生物群调节免疫系统细胞向肠道募集的一种新方式。