U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Format

Send to:

Choose Destination

SRX316652: GSM1177469: EXP_12_Dp7; [Clostridium] symbiosum; Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron VPI-5482; Bacteroides ovatus ATCC 8483; Bacteroides caccae ATCC 43185; Collinsella aerofaciens ATCC 25986; Marvinbryantia formatexigens DSM 14469; Escherichia coli str. K-12 sub
1 ILLUMINA (Illumina Genome Analyzer IIx) run: 41.9M spots, 1.6G bases, 995.4Mb downloads

Submitted by: NCBI (GEO)
Study: The metabolic niche of a prominent sulfate-reducing human gut bacterium [1]
show Abstracthide Abstract
Sulfate-reducing bacteria (SRB) colonize the guts of ~50% of humans and produce H2S, a signaling molecule with numerous host effects. We used genome-wide transposon mutagenesis and insertion-site sequencing (INSeq), RNA-Seq, plus mass spectrometry to characterize genetic and environmental factors that impact the niche of Desulfovibrio piger, the most common SRB in a surveyed cohort of healthy USA adults. Gnotobiotic mice were colonized with an assemblage of sequenced human gut bacterial species with or without D. piger and fed diets with different levels and types of carbohydrates and sulfur sources. Diet was a major determinant of functions expressed by this artificial 9-member community and of the genes that impact D. piger fitness; the latter includes high- and low-affinity systems for utilizing ammonia, a limiting resource for D. piger in mice consuming a polysaccharide-rich diet. While genes involved in hydrogen consumption and sulfate reduction are necessary for its colonization, varying dietary free sulfate levels did not significantly alter levels of D. piger, which can obtain sulfate from the host in part via cross-feeding mediated by Bacteroides-encoded sulfatases. Chondroitin sulfate, a common dietary supplement, increased D. piger and H2S levels without compromising gut barrier integrity. A chondroitin sulfate-supplemented diet together with D. piger impacted the assemblage's substrate utilization preferences, allowing consumption of more reduced carbon sources, and increasing the abundance of the H2-producing Actinobacterium, Collinsella aerofaciens. Our findings provide genetic and metabolic details of how this H2-consuming SRB shapes the responses of a microbiota to diet ingredients, and a framework for examining how individuals lacking D. piger differ from those that harbor it. Overall design: mRNA profiles of fecal contents from gnotobiotic mice colonized with defined consortia of human gut associated microbes
Sample: EXP_12_Dp7
SAMN02216939 • SRS453974 • All experiments • All runs
Library:
Instrument: Illumina Genome Analyzer IIx
Strategy: RNA-Seq
Source: TRANSCRIPTOMIC
Selection: cDNA
Layout: SINGLE
Construction protocol: Each frozen sample was suspended in a solution containing 500 mL of acid-washed glass beads (Sigma-Aldrich), 500 mL of extraction buffer A (200 mM NaCl, 20 mM EDTA), 210 mL of 20% SDS, and 500 mL of a mixture of phenol:chloroform:isoamyl alcohol (125:24:1, pH 4.5; Ambion), and then lysed by using a bead beater (BioSpec Products; maximal setting; 4 min at room temperature). Cellular debris was removed by centrifugation (8,000 × g; 3 min at 4°C). The extraction was repeated, and nucleic acids were precipitated with isopropanol and sodium acetate (pH 5.5). DNA libraries were prepared for sequencing using a modified version of Illumina's sample preparation protocol (see PMID:22030749 for protocol details)
Experiment attributes:
GEO Accession: GSM1177469
Links:
Runs: 1 run, 41.9M spots, 1.6G bases, 995.4Mb
Run# of Spots# of BasesSizePublished
SRR92391941,929,1181.6G995.4Mb2015-07-22

ID:
441871

Supplemental Content

Search details

See more...

Recent activity