Kumar Anand, Vlasova Anastasia N, Deblais Loic, Huang Huang-Chi, Wijeratne Asela, Kandasamy Sukumar, Fischer David D, Langel Stephanie N, Paim Francine Chimelo, Alhamo Moyasar A, Shao Lulu, Saif Linda J, Rajashekara Gireesh
Food Animal Research Program, The Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center,Veterinary Preventive Medicine Department, The Ohio State University, 1680 Madison Avenue, Wooster, OH, 44691, USA.
Present address: Group B-10: Biosecurity and Public Health, Bioscience Division, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, NM, USA.
BMC Gastroenterol. 2018 Jun 22;18(1):93. doi: 10.1186/s12876-018-0810-2.
Human rotavirus (HRV) is a major cause of viral gastroenteritis in infants; particularly in developing countries where malnutrition is prevalent. Malnutrition perturbs the infant gut microbiota leading to sub-optimal functioning of the immune system and further predisposing infants to enteric infections. Therefore, we hypothesized that malnutrition exacerbates rotavirus disease severity in infants.
In the present study, we used a neonatal germ free (GF) piglets transplanted with a two-month-old human infant's fecal microbiota (HIFM) on protein deficient and sufficient diets. We report the effects of malnourishment on the HRV infection and the HIFM pig microbiota in feces, intestinal and systemic tissues, using MiSeq 16S gene sequencing (V4-V5 region).
Microbiota analysis indicated that the HIFM transplantation resulted in a microbial composition in pigs similar to that of the original infant feces. This model was then used to understand the interconnections between microbiota diversity, diet, and HRV infection. Post HRV infection, HIFM pigs on the deficient diet had lower body weights, developed more severe diarrhea and increased virus shedding compared to HIFM pigs on sufficient diet. However, HRV induced diarrhea and shedding was more pronounced in non-colonized GF pigs compared to HIFM pigs on either sufficient or deficient diet, suggesting that the microbiota alone moderated HRV infection. HRV infected pigs on sufficient diet showed increased microbiota diversity in intestinal tissues; whereas, greater diversity was observed in systemic tissues of HRV infected pigs fed with deficient diet.
These results suggest that proper nourishment improves the microbiota quality in the intestines, alleviates HRV disease and lower probability of systemic translocation of potential opportunistic pathogens/pathobionts. In conclusion, our findings further support the role for microbiota and proper nutrition in limiting enteric diseases.
人类轮状病毒(HRV)是婴儿病毒性肠胃炎的主要病因;在营养不良普遍存在的发展中国家尤其如此。营养不良会扰乱婴儿肠道微生物群,导致免疫系统功能欠佳,并使婴儿更易发生肠道感染。因此,我们推测营养不良会加剧婴儿轮状病毒疾病的严重程度。
在本研究中,我们使用了新生无菌(GF)仔猪,这些仔猪在蛋白质缺乏和充足的饮食条件下移植了两个月大婴儿的粪便微生物群(HIFM)。我们使用MiSeq 16S基因测序(V4-V5区域)报告了营养不良对HRV感染以及粪便、肠道和全身组织中HIFM猪微生物群的影响。
微生物群分析表明,HIFM移植使猪的微生物组成与原始婴儿粪便相似。然后使用该模型来了解微生物群多样性、饮食和HRV感染之间的相互联系。HRV感染后,与饮食充足的HIFM猪相比,饮食缺乏的HIFM猪体重更低,腹泻更严重,病毒 shedding增加。然而,与饮食充足或缺乏的HIFM猪相比,未定植的GF猪中HRV诱导的腹泻和 shedding更明显,这表明仅微生物群就可调节HRV感染。饮食充足的HRV感染猪在肠道组织中显示出微生物群多样性增加;而在饮食缺乏的HRV感染猪的全身组织中观察到更高的多样性。
这些结果表明,适当的营养可改善肠道中的微生物群质量,减轻HRV疾病,并降低潜在机会性病原体/致病共生菌全身易位的可能性。总之,我们的研究结果进一步支持了微生物群和适当营养在限制肠道疾病方面的作用。