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Microbiota from the distal guts of lean and obese adolescents exhibit partial functional redundancy besides clear differences in community structure
Author(s) -
Ferrer Manuel,
Ruiz Alicia,
Lanza Francesca,
Haange SvenBastiaan,
Oberbach Andreas,
Till Holger,
Bargiela Rafael,
Campoy Cristina,
Segura Maria Teresa,
Richter Michael,
von Bergen Martin,
Seifert Jana,
Suarez Antonio
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
environmental microbiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.954
H-Index - 188
eISSN - 1462-2920
pISSN - 1462-2912
DOI - 10.1111/j.1462-2920.2012.02845.x
Subject(s) - biology , bacteroidetes , firmicutes , metagenomics , gut flora , phylum , proteobacteria , butyrate , genetics , zoology , microbiology and biotechnology , 16s ribosomal rna , gene , immunology , biochemistry , fermentation
Summary Recent research has disclosed a tight connection between obesity, metabolic gut microbial activities and host health. Obtaining a complete understanding of this relationship remains a major goal. Here, we conducted a comparative metagenomic and metaproteomic investigation of gut microbial communities in faecal samples taken from an obese and a lean adolescent. By analysing the diversity of 16S rDNA amplicons (10% operational phylogenetic units being common), 22 Mbp of consensus metagenome sequences (∼ 70% common) and the expression profiles of 613 distinct proteins (82% common), we found that in the obese gut, the total microbiota was more abundant on the phylum Firmicutes (94.6%) as compared with Bacteroidetes (3.2%), although the metabolically active microbiota clearly behaves in a more homogeneous manner with both contributing equally. The lean gut showed a remarkable shift towards Bacteroidetes (18.9% total 16S rDNA), which become the most active fraction (81% proteins). Although the two gut communities maintained largely similar gene repertoires and functional profiles, improved pili‐ and flagella‐mediated host colonization and improved capacity for both complementary aerobic and anaerobic de novo B 12 synthesis, 1,2‐propanediol catabolism (most likely participating in de novo B 12 synthesis) and butyrate production were observed in the obese gut, whereas bacteria from lean gut seem to be more engaged in vitamin B 6 synthesis. Furthermore, this study provides functional evidence that variable combinations of species from different phyla could ‘presumptively’ fulfil overlapping and/or complementary functional roles required by the host, a scenario where minor bacterial taxa seem to be significant active contributors.