1. Endogenous Enterobacteriaceae underlie variation in susceptibility to Salmonella infection
- Author
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Lindsey M. Gil, Keaton T. Heasley, Christopher A. Lopez, Eric M. Velazquez, Connor R. Tiffany, Megan J. Liou, Denise N. Bronner, Mariana X. Byndloss, Austin J. Byndloss, Henry Nguyen, Franziska Faber, Matthew Rolston, Andrew W.L. Rogers, Yael Litvak, Brittany M. Miller, Cheng H. Saechao, and Andreas J. Bäumler
- Subjects
Salmonella ,Salmonella infection ,Gut flora ,Inbred C57BL ,medicine.disease_cause ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,law.invention ,Probiotic ,Mice ,law ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Colonization ,Aetiology ,0303 health sciences ,biology ,Fecal Microbiota Transplantation ,Enterobacteriaceae ,Infectious Diseases ,Phenotype ,Medical Microbiology ,Salmonella Infections ,Infection ,Microbiology (medical) ,Animal Experimentation ,Immunology ,Microbiology ,Article ,Vaccine Related ,03 medical and health sciences ,Genetics ,medicine ,Escherichia coli ,Animals ,Germ-Free Life ,Microbiome ,030304 developmental biology ,Salmonella Infections, Animal ,Animal ,030306 microbiology ,Prevention ,Probiotics ,Reproducibility of Results ,Cell Biology ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,Biosynthetic Pathways ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Mice, Inbred C57BL ,Disease Models, Animal ,Emerging Infectious Diseases ,Disease Models ,Microbial Interactions ,Digestive Diseases ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Lack of reproducibility is a prominent problem in biomedical research. An important source of variation in animal experiments is the microbiome, but little is known about specific changes in the microbiota composition that cause phenotypic differences. Here, we show that genetically similar laboratory mice obtained from four different commercial vendors exhibited marked phenotypic variation in their susceptibility to Salmonella infection. Faecal microbiota transplant into germ-free mice replicated donor susceptibility, revealing that variability was due to changes in the gut microbiota composition. Co-housing of mice only partially transferred protection against Salmonella infection, suggesting that minority species within the gut microbiota might confer this trait. Consistent with this idea, we identified endogenous Enterobacteriaceae, a low-abundance taxon, as a keystone species responsible for variation in the susceptibility to Salmonella infection. Protection conferred by endogenous Enterobacteriaceae could be modelled by inoculating mice with probiotic Escherichia coli, which conferred resistance by using its aerobic metabolism to compete with Salmonella for resources. We conclude that a mechanistic understanding of phenotypic variation can accelerate development of strategies for enhancing the reproducibility of animal experiments. Variable susceptibility to Salmonella infection across genetically similar mice from commercial vendors is due to differential colonization of the gut microbiome by endogenous Enterobacteriaceae.
- Published
- 2019