Division of Protective Immunity, Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
mBio. 2024 Nov 13;15(11):e0153424. doi: 10.1128/mbio.01534-24. Epub 2024 Oct 23.
The gut microbiota plays a critical role in human health and disease. Microbial community assembly and succession early in life are influenced by numerous factors. In turn, assembly of this microbial community is known to influence the host, including immune system development, and has been linked to outcomes later in life. To date, the role of host-mediated nutritional immunity and metal availability in shaping microbial community assembly and succession early in life has not been explored in depth. Using a human infant cohort, we show that the metal-chelating protein calprotectin is highly abundant in infants. Taxa previously shown to be successful early colonizers of the infant gut, such as , and are highly resistant to experimental metal starvation in culture. , meanwhile, is highly susceptible to metal restriction, pointing to a possible mechanism by which host-mediated metal limitation shapes the fitness of early colonizing taxa in the infant gut. We further demonstrate that formula-fed infants harbor markedly higher levels of metals in their gastrointestinal tract compared to breastfed infants. Formula-fed infants with high levels of metals harbor distinct microbial communities compared to breastfed infants, with higher levels of , and , taxa which show increased resistance to the toxic effects of high metal concentrations. These data highlight a new paradigm in microbial community assembly and suggest an unappreciated role for nutritional immunity and dietary metals in shaping the earliest colonization events of the microbiota.IMPORTANCEEarly life represents a critical window for microbial colonization of the human gastrointestinal tract. Surprisingly, we still know little about the rules that govern the successful colonization of infants and the factors that shape the success of early life microbial colonizers. In this study, we report that metal availability is an important factor in the assembly and succession of the early life microbiota. We show that the host-derived metal-chelating protein, calprotectin, is highly abundant in infants and successful early life colonizers can overcome metal restriction. We further demonstrate that feeding modality (breastmilk vs formula) markedly impacts metal levels in the gut, potentially influencing microbial community succession. Our work suggests that metals, a previously unexplored aspect of early life ecology, may play a critical role in shaping the early events of microbiota assembly in infants.
肠道微生物群在人类健康和疾病中起着至关重要的作用。生命早期微生物群落的组装和演替受到许多因素的影响。反过来,这个微生物群落的组装被认为会影响宿主,包括免疫系统的发育,并与生命后期的结果有关。迄今为止,宿主介导的营养免疫和金属可用性在塑造生命早期微生物群落的组装和演替方面的作用尚未得到深入探讨。本研究使用人类婴儿队列表明,金属结合蛋白钙卫蛋白在婴儿中高度丰富。先前被证明是婴儿肠道早期定植成功的分类群,如 、 和 ,在实验性金属饥饿培养中具有高度抗性。而 则对金属限制高度敏感,这可能是宿主介导的金属限制塑造婴儿肠道早期定植分类群适应性的一种机制。我们进一步证明,与母乳喂养的婴儿相比,配方奶喂养的婴儿胃肠道中含有明显更高水平的金属。与母乳喂养的婴儿相比,高金属水平的配方奶喂养婴儿具有明显不同的微生物群落,具有更高水平的 、 和 ,这些分类群对高浓度金属的毒性作用表现出更高的抗性。这些数据突出了微生物群落组装的一个新范式,并表明营养免疫和膳食金属在塑造微生物组最早定植事件方面的作用被低估了。