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Diverse events have transferred genes for edible seaweed digestion from marine to human gut bacteria

Authors :
Nicholas A. Pudlo
Gabriel Vasconcelos Pereira
Jaagni Parnami
Melissa Cid
Stephanie Markert
Jeffrey P. Tingley
Frank Unfried
Ahmed Ali
Neha J. Varghese
Kwi S. Kim
Austin Campbell
Karthik Urs
Yao Xiao
Ryan Adams
Duña Martin
David N. Bolam
Dörte Becher
Emiley A. Eloe-Fadrosh
Thomas M. Schmidt
D. Wade Abbott
Thomas Schweder
Jan Hendrik Hehemann
Eric C. Martens
Source :
Cell host & microbe, vol 30, iss 3, Cell Host Microbe
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2022.

Abstract

Humans harbor numerous species of colonic bacteria that digest fiber polysaccharides in commonly consumed terrestrial plants. More recently in history, regional populations have consumed edible macroalgae seaweeds containing unique polysaccharides. It remains unclear how extensively gut bacteria have adapted to digest these nutrients. Here, we show that the ability of gut bacteria to digest seaweed polysaccharides is more pervasive than previously appreciated. Enrichment-cultured Bacteroides harbor previously discovered genes for seaweed degradation, which have mobilized into several members of this genus. Additionally, other examples of marine bacteria-derived genes, and their mobile DNA elements, are involved in gut microbial degradation of seaweed polysaccharides, including genes in gut-resident Firmicutes. Collectively, these results uncover multiple separate events that have mobilized the genes encoding seaweed degrading-enzymes into gut bacteria. This work further underscores the metabolic plasticity of the human gut microbiome and global exchange of genes in the context of dietary selective pressures.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell host & microbe, vol 30, iss 3, Cell Host Microbe
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e45e5998e262799b8557561a62a38c3d