Sharma Vandana, Rodionov Dmitry A, Leyn Semen A, Tran David, Iablokov Stanislav N, Ding Hua, Peterson Daniel A, Osterman Andrei L, Peterson Scott N
Infectious and Inflammatory Disease Center, Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute, La Jolla, CA, United States.
A.A. Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow, Russia.
Front Microbiol. 2019 Jul 2;10:1485. doi: 10.3389/fmicb.2019.01485. eCollection 2019.
Cross-feeding on intermediary and end-point metabolites plays an important role in the dynamic interactions of host-associated microbial communities. While gut microbiota possess inherent resilience to perturbation, variations in the intake of certain nutrients may lead to changes in the community composition with potential consequences on host physiology. Syntrophic relationships and mutualism at the level of major carbon and energy sources have been documented, however, relatively little is known about metabolic interactions involving micronutrients, such as B-vitamins, biosynthetic precursors of essential cofactors in the mammalian host and numerous members of the gut microbiota alike. genomic reconstruction and prediction of community-wide metabolic phenotypes for eight major B-vitamins (B1, B2, B3, B5, B6, B7, B9, and B12), suggests that a significant fraction of microbial gut communities (>20% by abundance) are represented by auxotrophic species whose viability is strictly dependent on acquiring one or more B-vitamins from diet and/or prototrophic microbes committed salvage pathways. Here, we report the stability of gut microbiota using humanized gnotobiotic mice and anaerobic fecal culture in the context of extreme variations of dietary B-vitamin supply as revealed by phylotype-to-phenotype prediction from 16S rRNA profiling and metabolomic measurements. The observed nearly unaltered relative abundance of auxotrophic species in gut communities in the face of diet or media lacking B-vitamins or containing them in great excess (∼30-fold above normal) points to a strong contribution of metabolic cooperation (B-vitamin exchange and sharing) to the stability of gut bacterial populations.
宿主相关微生物群落的动态相互作用中,对中间代谢产物和终产物代谢物的交叉摄食起着重要作用。虽然肠道微生物群对干扰具有内在的恢复力,但某些营养素摄入的变化可能导致群落组成的改变,对宿主生理产生潜在影响。在主要碳源和能源水平上的互养关系和共生现象已有记载,然而,对于涉及微量营养素(如B族维生素,哺乳动物宿主和众多肠道微生物群中必需辅因子的生物合成前体)的代谢相互作用,人们了解相对较少。对八种主要B族维生素(B1、B2、B3、B5、B6、B7、B9和B12)的全基因组重建和全群落代谢表型预测表明,很大一部分微生物肠道群落(丰度>20%)由营养缺陷型物种组成,其生存能力严格依赖于从饮食和/或进行补救途径的原养型微生物获取一种或多种B族维生素。在这里,我们通过16S rRNA基因测序和代谢组学测量的系统发育型到表型预测,报告了在饮食中B族维生素供应极端变化的情况下,使用人源化无菌小鼠和厌氧粪便培养的肠道微生物群的稳定性。面对缺乏B族维生素或B族维生素含量极高(比正常水平高约30倍)的饮食或培养基,肠道群落中营养缺陷型物种的相对丰度几乎未发生改变,这表明代谢合作(B族维生素交换和共享)对肠道细菌种群的稳定性有很大贡献。