Ericsson Aaron C, Franklin Craig L
Aaron C. Ericsson, DVM, PhD, is a research assistant professor and Craig L. Franklin, DVM, PhD, DACLAM, is a professor in the Department of Veterinary Pathobiology at the University of Missouri in Columbia, Missouri.
ILAR J. 2015;56(2):205-17. doi: 10.1093/ilar/ilv021.
Eukaryotic organisms are colonized by rich and dynamic communities of microbes, both internally (e.g., in the gastrointestinal and respiratory tracts) and externally (e.g., on skin and external mucosal surfaces). The vast majority of bacterial microbes reside in the lower gastrointestinal (GI) tract, and it is estimated that the gut of a healthy human is home to some 100 trillion bacteria, roughly an order of magnitude greater than the number of host somatic cells. The development of culture-independent methods to characterize the gut microbiota (GM) has spurred a renewed interest in its role in host health and disease. Indeed, associations have been identified between various changes in the composition of the GM and an extensive list of diseases, both enteric and systemic. Animal models provide a means whereby causal relationships between characteristic differences in the GM and diseases or conditions can be formally tested using genetically identical animals in highly controlled environments. Clearly, the GM and its interactions with the host and myriad environmental factors are exceedingly complex, and it is rare that a single microbial taxon associates with, much less causes, a phenotype with perfect sensitivity and specificity. Moreover, while the exact numbers are the subject of debate, it is well recognized that only a minority of gut bacteria can be successfully cultured ex vivo. Thus, to perform studies investigating causal roles of the GM in animal model phenotypes, researchers need clever techniques to experimentally manipulate the GM of animals, and several ingenious methods of doing so have been developed, each providing its own type of information and with its own set of advantages and drawbacks. The current review will focus on the various means of experimentally manipulating the GM of research animals, drawing attention to the factors that would aid a researcher in selecting an experimental approach, and with an emphasis on mice and rats, the primary model species used to evaluate the contribution of the GM to a disease phenotype.
真核生物被丰富多样的微生物群落所定植,这些微生物群落存在于体内(如胃肠道和呼吸道)和体外(如皮肤和外部黏膜表面)。绝大多数细菌微生物存在于下胃肠道(GI),据估计,健康人的肠道中约有100万亿个细菌,大约比宿主体细胞数量多一个数量级。用于表征肠道微生物群(GM)的非培养方法的发展激发了人们对其在宿主健康和疾病中作用的新兴趣。事实上,已经确定GM组成的各种变化与一系列广泛的疾病(包括肠道疾病和全身性疾病)之间存在关联。动物模型提供了一种手段,通过在高度受控的环境中使用基因相同的动物,可以正式测试GM的特征差异与疾病或病症之间的因果关系。显然,GM及其与宿主和众多环境因素的相互作用极其复杂,很少有单一的微生物分类群能以完美的敏感性和特异性与一种表型相关联,更不用说导致这种表型了。此外,虽然确切数字存在争议,但人们普遍认识到,只有少数肠道细菌能够在体外成功培养。因此,为了进行研究GM在动物模型表型中的因果作用的研究,研究人员需要巧妙的技术来实验性地操纵动物的GM,并且已经开发了几种巧妙的方法,每种方法都提供了自己类型的信息,有其自身的优点和缺点。本综述将重点关注实验性操纵实验动物GM的各种方法,提请注意有助于研究人员选择实验方法的因素,并重点关注小鼠和大鼠,这是用于评估GM对疾病表型贡献的主要模型物种。