Virus-induced perturbations in the mouse microbiome are impacted by microbial experience.

IF 3.7 2区 生物学 Q2 MICROBIOLOGY
mSphere Pub Date : 2025-03-25 Epub Date: 2025-02-13 DOI:10.1128/msphere.00563-24
Shanley N Roach, Wendy Phillips, Lauren M Pross, Autumn E Sanders, Mark J Pierson, Ryan C Hunter, Ryan A Langlois
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Abstract

The bacterial microbiome has a major impact on health and can shape metabolism, host tolerance, immune responses, and the outcome of future infections. The bacterial microbiome is highly variable between individuals. Specific pathogen-free animals have reduced microbiome diversity, making it difficult to evaluate the impact of infection-induced microbiome disruption that would be observed in free-living animals, including people. Mice are commonly used as a preclinical model but unfortunately often fail to predict translation success or failure, particularly for immune and infectious disease-targeting therapies. Here, we utilize pet store mouse cohoused "dirty" mice with diverse microbial experience to explore how host variability and infection may be interacting to drive unique microbiome changes. We found that cohoused animals had significantly increased bacterial diversity in the small intestine and cecum but not in the large intestine. There were differentially abundant taxa between clean and dirty animals in all three tissues. After infection with influenza A virus, samples clustered by both housing condition and infection status in the cecum and large intestine, while small intestine samples clustered predominantly by infection. Altogether, these results highlight the differential impact of housing, infection, and interaction between the two in dictating community composition across the gastrointestinal microbiome.IMPORTANCETraditionally housed pathogen-free mouse models do not fully capture the natural variability observed among human microbiomes, which may underlie their poor translationally predictive value. Understanding the difference between pathogen-induced shifts in the bacterial microbiome and natural microbiome variance is a major hurdle to determining bacterial biomarkers of disease. It is also critical to understand how diverse baseline microbiomes may be differentially impacted by infection and contribute to disease. Pet store cohoused "dirty" mice have diverse microbial experiences and microbiomes, allowing us to evaluate how baseline variation, infection, and interaction between the two impact the microbiome.

病毒诱导的小鼠微生物组的扰动受到微生物经验的影响。
细菌微生物组对健康有重大影响,可以塑造新陈代谢、宿主耐受性、免疫反应和未来感染的结果。细菌微生物组在个体之间变化很大。特定的无病原体动物减少了微生物组的多样性,这使得很难评估在包括人类在内的自由生活动物中观察到的感染引起的微生物组破坏的影响。小鼠通常被用作临床前模型,但不幸的是,通常无法预测翻译的成功或失败,特别是对于免疫和传染病靶向治疗。在这里,我们利用宠物店小鼠与不同微生物经验的“脏”小鼠一起探索宿主变异性和感染如何相互作用以驱动独特的微生物组变化。我们发现,冷藏动物小肠和盲肠的细菌多样性显著增加,而大肠则没有。三种组织中干净动物与脏动物的类群数量存在差异。感染甲型流感病毒后,盲肠和大肠的居住条件和感染状况使样本聚集,而小肠样本主要因感染而聚集。总之,这些结果突出了住房、感染和两者之间的相互作用在决定胃肠道微生物组群落组成方面的差异影响。传统的无病原体小鼠模型不能完全捕获在人类微生物组中观察到的自然变异性,这可能是其翻译预测价值较差的原因。了解病原体诱导的细菌微生物组变化与天然微生物组变化之间的差异是确定疾病细菌生物标志物的主要障碍。了解不同的基线微生物群如何受到感染的不同影响并导致疾病也是至关重要的。宠物店冷藏的“脏”老鼠有不同的微生物体验和微生物组,使我们能够评估基线变化,感染和两者之间的相互作用如何影响微生物组。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
mSphere
mSphere Immunology and Microbiology-Microbiology
CiteScore
8.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
192
审稿时长
11 weeks
期刊介绍: mSphere™ is a multi-disciplinary open-access journal that will focus on rapid publication of fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. Its scope will reflect the immense range of fields within the microbial sciences, creating new opportunities for researchers to share findings that are transforming our understanding of human health and disease, ecosystems, neuroscience, agriculture, energy production, climate change, evolution, biogeochemical cycling, and food and drug production. Submissions will be encouraged of all high-quality work that makes fundamental contributions to our understanding of microbiology. mSphere™ will provide streamlined decisions, while carrying on ASM''s tradition for rigorous peer review.
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