Hoy Yana Emmy, Bik Elisabeth M, Lawley Trevor D, Holmes Susan P, Monack Denise M, Theriot Julie A, Relman David A
Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, California, United States of America.
Department of Statistics, Stanford University, Stanford, California, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2015 Nov 13;10(11):e0142825. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0142825. eCollection 2015.
Genetics, diet, and other environmental exposures are thought to be major factors in the development and composition of the intestinal microbiota of animals. However, the relative contributions of these factors in adult animals, as well as variation with time in a variety of important settings, are still not fully understood. We studied a population of inbred, female mice fed the same diet and housed under the same conditions. We collected fecal samples from 46 individual mice over two weeks, sampling four of these mice for periods as long as 236 days for a total of 190 samples, and determined the phylogenetic composition of their microbial communities after analyzing 1,849,990 high-quality pyrosequencing reads of the 16S rRNA gene V3 region. Even under these controlled conditions, we found significant inter-individual variation in community composition, as well as variation within an individual over time, including increases in alpha diversity during the first 2 months of co-habitation. Some variation was explained by mouse membership in different cage and vendor shipment groups. The differences among individual mice from the same shipment group and cage were still significant. Overall, we found that 23% of the variation in intestinal microbiota composition was explained by changes within the fecal microbiota of a mouse over time, 12% was explained by persistent differences among individual mice, 14% by cage, and 18% by shipment group. Our findings suggest that the microbiota of controlled populations of inbred laboratory animals may not be as uniform as previously thought, that animal rearing and handling may account for some variation, and that as yet unidentified factors may explain additional components of variation in the composition of the microbiota within populations and individuals over time. These findings have implications for the design and interpretation of experiments involving laboratory animals.
遗传学、饮食及其他环境暴露因素被认为是影响动物肠道微生物群发育和组成的主要因素。然而,这些因素在成年动物中的相对作用,以及在各种重要情况下随时间的变化,仍未被完全了解。我们研究了一群饮食相同且饲养条件相同的近交系雌性小鼠。在两周内,我们从46只个体小鼠中收集粪便样本,对其中4只小鼠进行长达236天的采样,共获得190个样本,并在对16S rRNA基因V3区域的1,849,990条高质量焦磷酸测序读数进行分析后,确定了其微生物群落的系统发育组成。即使在这些受控条件下,我们仍发现群落组成存在显著的个体间差异,以及个体随时间的变化,包括同居前两个月内α多样性的增加。部分差异可由小鼠所在的不同笼子和供应商运输批次来解释。来自同一运输批次和笼子的个体小鼠之间的差异仍然显著。总体而言,我们发现肠道微生物群组成中23%的变异可由小鼠粪便微生物群随时间的变化来解释,12%可由个体小鼠之间的持续差异来解释,14%可由笼子来解释, 18%可由运输批次来解释。我们的研究结果表明,近交系实验动物受控群体的微生物群可能不像之前认为的那样均匀,动物饲养和处理可能导致一些变异,并且尚未确定的因素可能解释群体和个体中微生物群组成随时间变化的其他变异成分。这些发现对涉及实验动物的实验设计和解释具有启示意义。