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713 Lecture 15. Host metagenomics. Progression of techniques. Culture based Use phenotypes and genotypes to ID Non-culture based, focused on 16S rDNA Clone 16S PCR products into vector and sequence Non-culture based, no cloning, sequence 16s
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713 Lecture 15 Host metagenomics
Progression of techniques • Culture based • Use phenotypes and genotypes to ID • Non-culture based, focused on 16S rDNA • Clone 16S PCR products into vector and sequence • Non-culture based, no cloning, sequence 16s • Future: non-culture based, no cloning, sequence all genes being used (RT-PCR of RNA into cDNA, sequence)
Metagenomics • Metagenome – Analysis of the genetic material within a community of organisms Extract DNA Sequence DNA Analyze the types found
More on the mammalian gut microbiome • Adult monozygotic twins (and, to a lesser extent, dizygotic twins and siblings) have more similar gut microbes than to their marital partners • Animals inherit their gut flora from their mothers • Host genotype appears to affect relative abundance of community members, not composition
Mouse vs Fish • 99% of mouse gut bacteria belong to Bacteroides and Firmicutes • Mostly Proteobacteria in Fish • Do gut bacteria differ because the residents of their typical environment differ? • Or does the host animal select the resident bacteria?
Responses of zebrafish to colonization with individual cultured gut microbes
The Intestinal Microbiome • The gut microbiome is largely shared among family members • Your intestinal flora is closer to your mom and dad’s than your friend’s • In a study of 154 individuals, there was no common shared species between all individuals • There are 150 times more genes in the intestinal microbiome than in the human genome • Many of these bacteria perform metabolic functions necessary for digestion
Co-Metabolism • The intestinal flora provide us with enzymes that can break down foods that the human genome does not encode • Glycoside hydrolase breaks down polysaccharides (such as pectin) • Our intestinal flora co-metabolizes our food and provides us with nutrients • Vitamin K, short chain fatty acids, biotin, Tryptophan, other amino acids, lipids, and indole-melanin • In a study involving rats, antibiotic intervention drastically altered the intermediate metabolites for many nutrients • After antibiotic treatment the rats were observed every day for the restoration of the metabolites to levels before antibiotic treatment
Co-Metabolism • Antibiotics don’t just alter the microbial community • Provides proof in mammals that antibiotic treatment has effects on digestion • Reduced microbial flora changes metabolism
Intestinal Flora and Obesity • Obese individuals have reduced microbial diversity • The amount of bacteroidetes decreases and firmicutes increase (associated with high fat diets) • Although bacteroidetes decrease, a subgroup of this phyla, Prevotellaceae, increases (No dietary restrictions) • The energy that microbes harvest from foods is increased in obese individuals compared to lean individuals • They release more calories, which in turn are taken up by the body
Diet Changes the Intestinal Flora • A study using humanized mice with transplanted microbial communities from healthy individuals found that diet alters the intestinal community • The original community was heritable from generation to generation • When switched to a high fat diet, bacteroidetes decreased, firmicutes increased, and the mice started to gain weight • This new, alter community became transmissible from mother to offspring • This finding indicates that an unhealthy community can set up offspring for a less efficient microbial community
Diet Changes the Intestinal Flora • A human study found that restricting calories and fat can change the microbial flora • Obese subjects were monitored for one year and were found to have Firmicutes and Bacteroidetes compose 92% of the intestinal flora • This trend was stable for all subjects for one year
Diet Changes the Intestinal Flora • The subjects were then randomly assigned to fat restricted or carbohydrate restricted diets and monitored for another year
The Intestinal Flora and Autoimmune Diseases • Not many direct links or causes have been made yet • It is hypothesized that properly regulated microbes send metabolic signals to the innate immune system • These signals can either suppress or stimulate the innate immune response
The Intestinal Flora and Autoimmune Diseases • More studies are being conducted to elucidate the possible mechanistic causes of this microbe-immune system interaction • A trial treatment for Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis is fecal bacteriotherapy • Fecal transplant from healthy individuals into affected individuals • Shows promising results so far but needs clinical trials • Many people are “grossed out” by the treatment