Linking active rectal mucosa-attached microbiota to host immunity reveals its role in host-pathogenic STEC O157 interactions.

IF 10.8 1区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 ECOLOGY
Zhe Pan, Yanhong Chen, Mi Zhou, Tim A McAllister, Tom N Mcneilly, Le Luo Guan
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Abstract

The rectal-anal junction (RAJ) is the major colonization site of Shiga toxin-producing Escherichia coli (STEC) O157 in beef cattle, leading to transmission of this foodborne pathogen from farms to food chains. To date, there is limited understanding regarding whether the mucosa-attached microbiome has a profound impact on host-STEC interactions. In this study, the active RAJ mucosa-attached microbiota and its potential role in host immunity-STEC commensal interactions were investigated using RAJ mucosal biopsies collected from calves orally challenged with two STEC O157 strains with or without functional stx2a (stx2a+ or stx2a-). The results revealed that shifts of microbial diversity, topology, and assembly patterns were subjected to stx2a production post-challenge and Paeniclostridium and Gallibacterium were the keystone taxa for both microbial interactions and assembly. Additional mucosal transcriptome profiling showed stx2a-dependent host immune responses (i.e. B- and T-cell signaling and antigen processing and presentation) post-challenge. Further integrated analysis revealed that mucosa-attached beneficial microbes (i.e. Provotella, Faecalibacterium, and Dorea) interacted with host immune genes pre-challenge to maintain host homeostasis; however, opportunistic pathogenic microbes (i.e. Paeniclostridium) could interact with host immune genes after the STEC O157 colonization and interactions were stx2a-dependent. Furthermore, predicted bacterial functions involved in pathogen (O157 and Paeniclostridium) colonization and metabolism were related to host immunity. These findings suggest that during pathogen colonization, host-microbe interactions could shift from beneficial to opportunistic pathogenic bacteria driven and be dependent on the production of particular virulence factors, highlighting the potential regulatory role of mucosa-attached microbiota in affecting pathogen-commensal host interactions in calves with STEC O157 infection.

将活跃的直肠粘膜附着微生物群与宿主免疫联系起来,揭示其在宿主与致病性 STEC O157 相互作用中的作用。
直肠肛门交界处(RAJ)是肉牛产志贺毒素大肠杆菌(STEC)O157 的主要定植部位,导致这种食源性病原体从农场传播到食物链。迄今为止,人们对粘膜附着微生物群是否对宿主与 STEC 的相互作用产生深远影响的了解还很有限。在本研究中,研究人员使用从小牛口腔采集的 RAJ 粘膜活检组织,研究了活跃的 RAJ 粘膜附着微生物群及其在宿主免疫-STEC-共生物相互作用中的潜在作用,这两种 STEC O157 菌株有或没有功能性 stx2a(stx2a + 或 stx2a-)。研究结果表明,微生物的分化、拓扑和组装模式的转变受制于挑战后stx2a的产生,而Paeniclostridium和Gallibacterium是微生物相互作用和组装的关键类群。其他粘膜转录组分析表明,挑战后的宿主免疫反应(即 B 细胞和 T 细胞信号传导、抗原处理和呈递)依赖于 stx2a。进一步的综合分析表明,粘膜附着的有益微生物(即Provotella、Faecalibacterium和Dorea)在挑战前与宿主免疫基因相互作用,以维持宿主的平衡,然而,机会性致病微生物(即Paeniclostridium)在STEC O157定植后可与宿主免疫基因相互作用,而且这种相互作用是stx2a依赖性的。此外,参与病原体(O157 和栅状芽胞杆菌)定植和新陈代谢的细菌预测功能与宿主免疫相关。这些研究结果表明,在病原体定植过程中,宿主与微生物之间的相互作用可能会从有益转变为机会性致病菌驱动,并取决于特定毒力因子的产生。
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来源期刊
ISME Journal
ISME Journal 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
22.10
自引率
2.70%
发文量
171
审稿时长
2.6 months
期刊介绍: The ISME Journal covers the diverse and integrated areas of microbial ecology. We encourage contributions that represent major advances for the study of microbial ecosystems, communities, and interactions of microorganisms in the environment. Articles in The ISME Journal describe pioneering discoveries of wide appeal that enhance our understanding of functional and mechanistic relationships among microorganisms, their communities, and their habitats.
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