Priority effects shape the structure of infant-type Bifidobacterium communities on human milk oligosaccharides

被引:0
|
作者
Miriam N. Ojima
Lin Jiang
Aleksandr A. Arzamasov
Keisuke Yoshida
Toshitaka Odamaki
Jinzhong Xiao
Aruto Nakajima
Motomitsu Kitaoka
Junko Hirose
Tadasu Urashima
Toshihiko Katoh
Aina Gotoh
Douwe van Sinderen
Dmitry A. Rodionov
Andrei L. Osterman
Mikiyasu Sakanaka
Takane Katayama
机构
[1] Kyoto University,Graduate School of Biostudies
[2] Georgia Institute of Technology,School of Biological Sciences
[3] Sanford Burnham Prebys Medical Discovery Institute,Next Generation Science Institute
[4] Morinaga Milk Industry Co.,Faculty of Agriculture
[5] Ltd.,School of Human Cultures
[6] Niigata University,Department of Food and Life Science
[7] The University of Shiga Prefecture,APC Microbiome Ireland and School of Microbiology, Food Science Building
[8] Obihiro University of Agriculture and Veterinary Medicine,Department of Food and Nutrition
[9] University College Cork,undefined
[10] Kyoto Women’s University,undefined
来源
The ISME Journal | 2022年 / 16卷
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摘要
Bifidobacteria are among the first colonizers of the infant gut, and human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) in breastmilk are instrumental for the formation of a bifidobacteria-rich microbiota. However, little is known about the assembly of bifidobacterial communities. Here, by applying assembly theory to a community of four representative infant-gut associated Bifidobacterium species that employ varied strategies for HMO consumption, we show that arrival order and sugar consumption phenotypes significantly affected community formation. Bifidobacterium bifidum and Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis, two avid HMO consumers, dominate through inhibitory priority effects. On the other hand, Bifidobacterium breve, a species with limited HMO-utilization ability, can benefit from facilitative priority effects and dominates by utilizing fucose, an HMO degradant not utilized by the other bifidobacterial species. Analysis of publicly available breastfed infant faecal metagenome data showed that the observed trends for B. breve were consistent with our in vitro data, suggesting that priority effects may have contributed to its dominance. Our study highlights the importance and history dependency of initial community assembly and its implications for the maturation trajectory of the infant gut microbiota.
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页码:2265 / 2279
页数:14
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