Food Animal Health Research Program, Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center, Wooster, OH, United States.
Department of Veterinary Preventive Medicine, College of Veterinary Medicine, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, United States.
Front Immunol. 2019 Jul 16;10:1509. doi: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01509. eCollection 2019.
The gut microbiome plays an important role in the immune system development, maintenance of normal health status, and in disease progression. In this study, we comparatively examined the fecal microbiomes of Amish (rural) and non-Amish (urban) infants and investigated how they could affect the mucosal immune maturation in germ-free piglets that were inoculated with the two types of infant fecal microbiota (IFM). Differences in microbiome diversity and structure were noted between the two types of fecal microbiotas. The fecal microbiota of the non-Amish (urban) infants had a greater relative abundance of Actinobacteria and Bacteroidetes phyla, while that of the Amish (rural) counterparts was dominated by Firmicutes. Amish infants had greater species richness compared with the non-Amish infants' microbiota. The fecal microbiotas of the Amish and the non-Amish infants were successfully transplanted into germ-free piglets, and the diversity and structure of the microbiota in the transplanted piglets remained similar at phylum level but not at the genus level. Principal coordinates analysis (PCoA) based on Weighted-UniFrac distance revealed distinct microbiota structure in the intestines of the transplanted piglets. Shotgun metagenomic analysis also revealed clear differences in functional diversity of fecal microbiome between Amish and non-Amish donors as well as microbiota transplanted piglets. Specific functional features were enriched in either of the microbiota transplanted piglet groups directly corresponding to the predominance of certain bacterial populations in their gut environment. Some of the colonized bacterial genera were correlated with the frequency of important lymphoid and myeloid immune cells in the ileal submucosa and mesenteric lymph nodes (MLN), both important for mucosal immune maturation. Overall, this study demonstrated that transplantation of diverse IFM into germ-free piglets largely recapitulates the differences in gut microbiota structure between rural (Amish) and urban (non-Amish) infants. Thus, fecal microbiota transplantation to germ-free piglets could be a useful large animal model system for elucidating the impact of gut microbiota on the mucosal immune system development. Future studies can focus on determining the additional advantages of the pig model over the rodent model.
肠道微生物群在免疫系统发育、维持正常健康状态以及疾病进展中起着重要作用。在这项研究中,我们比较了阿米什(农村)和非阿米什(城市)婴儿的粪便微生物群,并研究了它们如何影响接种两种类型婴儿粪便微生物群(IFM)的无菌小猪的粘膜免疫成熟。两种粪便微生物群的微生物多样性和结构存在差异。非阿米什(城市)婴儿的粪便微生物群中放线菌和拟杆菌门的相对丰度较高,而阿米什(农村)婴儿的粪便微生物群则以厚壁菌门为主。与非阿米什婴儿的微生物群相比,阿米什婴儿的物种丰富度更高。阿米什和非阿米什婴儿的粪便微生物群成功移植到无菌小猪体内,移植小猪的微生物多样性和结构在门水平上保持相似,但在属水平上则不然。基于加权 UniFrac 距离的主坐标分析(PCoA)显示,移植小猪的肠道微生物群结构明显不同。 shotgun 宏基因组分析还揭示了阿米什和非阿米什供体以及移植微生物群小猪之间粪便微生物群功能多样性的明显差异。特定的功能特征在其肠道环境中某些细菌种群占优势的情况下在任何一个移植微生物群小猪组中都得到了富集。一些定植细菌属与回肠粘膜下和肠系膜淋巴结(MLN)中重要的淋巴样和髓样免疫细胞的频率相关,这两者对粘膜免疫成熟都很重要。总的来说,这项研究表明,将多样化的 IFM 移植到无菌小猪体内,在很大程度上再现了农村(阿米什)和城市(非阿米什)婴儿之间肠道微生物群结构的差异。因此,粪便微生物群移植到无菌小猪体内可能是阐明肠道微生物群对粘膜免疫系统发育影响的有用大型动物模型系统。未来的研究可以集中于确定猪模型相对于啮齿动物模型的额外优势。