학술논문

Metabolic independence drives gut microbial colonization and resilience in health and disease
Document Type
article
Source
Genome Biology, Vol 24, Iss 1, Pp 1-21 (2023)
Subject
Fecal microbiota transplantation
Human gut microbiome
Microbial colonization
Microbial metabolism
Metabolic independence
Biology (General)
QH301-705.5
Genetics
QH426-470
Language
English
ISSN
1474-760X
Abstract
Abstract Background Changes in microbial community composition as a function of human health and disease states have sparked remarkable interest in the human gut microbiome. However, establishing reproducible insights into the determinants of microbial succession in disease has been a formidable challenge. Results Here we use fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) as an in natura experimental model to investigate the association between metabolic independence and resilience in stressed gut environments. Our genome-resolved metagenomics survey suggests that FMT serves as an environmental filter that favors populations with higher metabolic independence, the genomes of which encode complete metabolic modules to synthesize critical metabolites, including amino acids, nucleotides, and vitamins. Interestingly, we observe higher completion of the same biosynthetic pathways in microbes enriched in IBD patients. Conclusions These observations suggest a general mechanism that underlies changes in diversity in perturbed gut environments and reveal taxon-independent markers of “dysbiosis” that may explain why widespread yet typically low-abundance members of healthy gut microbiomes can dominate under inflammatory conditions without any causal association with disease.