Literature DB >> 27258951

Evidence for persistent and shared bacterial strains against a background of largely unique gut colonization in hospitalized premature infants.

Tali Raveh-Sadka1, Brian Firek2, Itai Sharon1, Robyn Baker3, Christopher T Brown1, Brian C Thomas1, Michael J Morowitz2, Jillian F Banfield1.   

Abstract

The potentially critical stage of initial gut colonization in premature infants occurs in the hospital environment, where infants are exposed to a variety of hospital-associated bacteria. Because few studies of microbial communities are strain-resolved, we know little about the extent to which specific strains persist in the hospital environment and disperse among infants. To study this, we compared 304 near-complete genomes reconstructed from fecal samples of 21 infants hospitalized in the same intensive care unit in two cohorts, over 3 years apart. The genomes represent 159 distinct bacterial strains, only 14 of which occurred in multiple infants. Enterococcus faecalis and Staphylococcus epidermidis, common infant gut colonists, exhibit diversity comparable to that of reference strains, inline with introduction of strains from infant-specific sources rather than a hospital strain pool. Unlike other infants, a pair of sibling infants shared multiple strains, even after extensive antibiotic administration, suggesting overlapping strain-sources and/or genetic selection drive microbiota similarities. Interestingly, however, five strains were detected in infants hospitalized three years apart. Three of these were also detected in multiple infants in the same year. This finding of a few widely dispersed and persistent bacterial colonizers despite overall low potential for strain dispersal among infants has implications for understanding and directing healthy colonization.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27258951      PMCID: PMC5148203          DOI: 10.1038/ismej.2016.83

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  ISME J        ISSN: 1751-7362            Impact factor:   10.302


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Review 5.  Necrotizing enterocolitis.

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Authors:  Brandon Brooks; Brian A Firek; Christopher S Miller; Itai Sharon; Brian C Thomas; Robyn Baker; Michael J Morowitz; Jillian F Banfield
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  20 in total

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8.  Identical bacterial populations colonize premature infant gut, skin, and oral microbiomes and exhibit different in situ growth rates.

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10.  Hospitalized Premature Infants Are Colonized by Related Bacterial Strains with Distinct Proteomic Profiles.

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