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Oxidative ornithine metabolism supports non-inflammatory C. difficile colonization

Authors :
Kali M. Pruss
Fatima Enam
Eric Battaglioli
Mary DeFeo
Oscar R. Diaz
Steven K. Higginbottom
Curt R. Fischer
Andrew J. Hryckowian
William Van Treuren
Dylan Dodd
Purna Kashyap
Justin L. Sonnenburg
Source :
Nature Metabolism
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

The enteric pathogen Clostridioides difficile (Cd) is responsible for a toxin-mediated infection that causes more than 200,000 recorded hospitalizations and 13,000 deaths in the United States every year1. However, Cd can colonize the gut in the absence of disease symptoms. Prevalence of asymptomatic colonization by toxigenic Cd in healthy populations is high; asymptomatic carriers are at increased risk of infection compared to noncolonized individuals and may be a reservoir for transmission of Cd infection2,3. Elucidating the molecular mechanisms by which Cd persists in the absence of disease is necessary for understanding pathogenesis and developing refined therapeutic strategies. Here, we show with gut microbiome metatranscriptomic analysis that mice recalcitrant to Cd infection and inflammation exhibit increased community-wide expression of arginine and ornithine metabolic pathways. To query Cd metabolism specifically, we leverage RNA sequencing in gnotobiotic mice infected with two wild-type strains (630 and R20291) and isogenic toxin-deficient mutants of these strains to differentiate inflammation-dependent versus -independent transcriptional states. A single operon encoding oxidative ornithine degradation is consistently upregulated across non-toxigenic Cd strains. Combining untargeted and targeted metabolomics with bacterial and host genetics, we demonstrate that both diet- and host-derived sources of ornithine provide a competitive advantage to Cd, suggesting a mechanism for Cd persistence within a non-inflammatory, healthy gut.<br />Using a combination of metabolomics and bacterial and host genetics, Pruss et al. show that upregulated oxidative ornithine metabolism in Clostridioides difficile promotes its persistence within the gastrointestinal tract under non-inflammatory conditions.

Details

ISSN :
25225812
Volume :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17e36cd405e16e2f75469003702b5a5a
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42255-021-00506-4