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Quantifying rapid bacterial evolution and transmission within the mouse intestine

Authors :
Karina B. Xavier
Andrés Aranda-Díaz
Nate Cira
Kerwyn Casey Huang
Benjamin H. Good
Feiqiao Brian Yu
Kimberly S. Vasquez
Gavin Sherlock
Lisa Willis
Norma Neff
Justin L. Sonnenburg
Miguel F. Pedro
Steven K. Higginbottom
Manohary Rajendram
Stephen R. Quake
Katharine M. Ng
Source :
Cell Host Microbe
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Summary Due to limitations on high-resolution strain tracking, selection dynamics during gut microbiota colonization and transmission between hosts remain mostly mysterious. Here, we introduced hundreds of barcoded Escherichia coli strains into germ-free mice and quantified strain-level dynamics and metagenomic changes. Mutations in genes involved in motility and metabolite utilization are reproducibly selected within days. Even with rapid selection, coprophagy enforced similar barcode distributions across co-housed mice. Whole-genome sequencing of hundreds of isolates revealed linked alleles that demonstrate between-host transmission. A population-genetics model predicts substantial fitness advantages for certain mutants and that migration accounted for ∼10% of the resident microbiota each day. Treatment with ciprofloxacin suggests interplay between selection and transmission. While initial colonization was mostly uniform, in two mice a bottleneck reduced diversity and selected for ciprofloxacin resistance in the absence of drug. These findings highlight the interplay between environmental transmission and rapid, deterministic selection during evolution of the intestinal microbiota.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Host Microbe
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....878e8db9e80b0ba1592b71c1c116638c