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Gut microbiota bacterial strain richness is species specific and limits therapeutic engraftment

Authors :
Alice Chen-Liaw
Varun Aggarwala
Ilaria Mogno
Craig Haifer
Zhihua Li
Joseph Eggers
Drew Helmus
Amy Hart
Jan Wehkamp
Esi SN Lamousé-Smith
Robert L. Kerby
Federico E. Rey
Jean Frédéric Colombel
Michael A Kamm
Thomas J. Borody
Ari Grinspan
Sudarshan Paramsothy
Nadeem O. Kaakoush
Marla C. Dubinsky
Jeremiah J. Faith
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2022.

Abstract

Despite the fundamental role of strain variation in gut microbiota function, the number of unique strains of a species that can stably colonize the human gut is still unknown. In this work, we determine the strain richness of common gut species using thousands of sequenced bacterial isolates and metagenomes. We find that strain richness varies across species, is transferable by fecal microbiota transplantation, and is low in the gut compared to other environments. Therapeutic administration of supraphysiologic numbers of strains per species only temporarily increases recipient strain richness, which subsequently converges back to the population average. These results suggest that properties of the gut ecosystem govern the number of strains of each species colonizing the gut and provide a theoretical framework for strain engraftment and replacement in fecal microbiota transplantation and defined live biotherapeutic products.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........aee4c06637db15097865c6d08facaacc