Maryse D Berkhout, Athanasia Ioannou, Yuvashankar Kavanal Jayaprakash, Caroline M Plugge, Clara Belzer
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Glycans are crucial for infant gut microbiota development. Human milk contains prebiotic human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) that stimulate gut microbes. Simultaneously, the glycan-rich mucus layer develops and attracts mucin glycan-degrading bacteria. As HMOs and mucin are degraded by homologous enzymes, bacterial glycan-degrading abilities overlap. However, less is known about how infant gut microbial communities form when both types of glycans are available. To study this, we created a synthetic community with specialist glycan degraders and cross-feeders from the infant gut (BabyBac). We evaluated it in different in vitro conditions including combinations of diet-derived [HMOs, galactooligosaccharides (GOS), and fructooligosaccarides (FOS)] and mucus glycans. Glycan combinations significantly affected the community composition and metabolic output. The glycan type affected the overall community, with mucin and HMOs being the top drivers of variation. HMOs favoured glycan degraders and cross-feeders, whereas mucin glycan degrader Akkermansia muciniphila was outcompeted. Conversely, when mucin was present, A. muciniphila thrived. Addition of mucin monomers and 2'-FL to GOS/FOS did not reinstate A. muciniphila abundance. This suggests that A. muciniphila cannot compete with infant-related bacteria without the complete mucin structure. Overall, our findings suggest that the interplay between dietary and mucus glycans creates niche differentiation in the infant gut microbiota.
期刊介绍:
FEMS Microbiology Ecology aims to ensure efficient publication of high-quality papers that are original and provide a significant contribution to the understanding of microbial ecology. The journal contains Research Articles and MiniReviews on fundamental aspects of the ecology of microorganisms in natural soil, aquatic and atmospheric habitats, including extreme environments, and in artificial or managed environments. Research papers on pure cultures and in the areas of plant pathology and medical, food or veterinary microbiology will be published where they provide valuable generic information on microbial ecology. Papers can deal with culturable and non-culturable forms of any type of microorganism: bacteria, archaea, filamentous fungi, yeasts, protozoa, cyanobacteria, algae or viruses. In addition, the journal will publish Perspectives, Current Opinion and Controversy Articles, Commentaries and Letters to the Editor on topical issues in microbial ecology.
- Application of ecological theory to microbial ecology
- Interactions and signalling between microorganisms and with plants and animals
- Interactions between microorganisms and their physicochemical enviornment
- Microbial aspects of biogeochemical cycles and processes
- Microbial community ecology
- Phylogenetic and functional diversity of microbial communities
- Evolutionary biology of microorganisms