| Literature DB >> 35240043 |
Nicholas A Pudlo1, Gabriel Vasconcelos Pereira1, Jaagni Parnami2, Melissa Cid2, Stephanie Markert3, Jeffrey P Tingley4, Frank Unfried5, Ahmed Ali1, Neha J Varghese6, Kwi S Kim1, Austin Campbell1, Karthik Urs1, Yao Xiao1, Ryan Adams1, Duña Martin1, David N Bolam7, Dörte Becher6, Emiley A Eloe-Fadrosh8, Thomas M Schmidt9, D Wade Abbott4, Thomas Schweder3, Jan Hendrik Hehemann10, Eric C Martens11.
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.Entities:
Keywords: Bacteroides; human gut microbiome; lateral gene transfer; polysaccharide metabolism
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35240043 PMCID: PMC9096808 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2022.02.001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 31.316