Metabolic in Vivo
Labeling Highlights Differences
of Metabolically Active Microbes from the Mucosal Gastrointestinal
Microbiome between High-Fat and Normal Chow Diet
posted on 2017-03-02, 00:00authored byAndreas Oberbach, Sven-Bastiaan Haange, Nadine Schlichting, Marco Heinrich, Stefanie Lehmann, Holger Till, Floor Hugenholtz, Yvonne Kullnick, Hauke Smidt, Karin Frank, Jana Seifert, Nico Jehmlich, Martin von Bergen
The
gastrointestinal microbiota in the gut interacts metabolically
and immunologically with the host tissue in the contact zone of the
mucus layer. For understanding the details of these interactions and
especially their dynamics it is crucial to identify the metabolically
active subset of the microbiome. This became possible by the development
of stable isotope probing techniques, which have only sparsely been
applied to microbiome research. We applied the in vivo stable isotope
approach using 15N-labeled diet with subsequent identification
of metabolically active bacterial species. Four-week old male Sprague–Dawley
rats were randomly assigned to chow diet (CD, n =15)
and high-fat diet (HFD, n =15). After 11 weeks, three
animals from each group were sacrificed for baseline characterization
of anthropometric and metabolic obesity. The remaining animals were
exposed to either a 15N-labeled (n =9)
or a 14N-unlabeled experimental diet (n =3). Three rats from each cohort (HFD and CD) were sacrificed at
12, 24, and 72 h. The remaining three animals from each cohort, which
received the 14N-unlabeled diet, were sacrificed after
72 h. The colon was harvested and divided into three equal sections
(proximal, medial, and distal), and the mucus layer of each specimen
was sampled by scraping. We identified the active subset in an HFD
model of obesity in comparison with lean controls rats using metaproteomics.
In addition, all samples were investigated by 16S rRNA amplicon gene
sequencing. The active microbiome of the HFD group showed an increase
in bacterial taxa for Verrucomicrobia and Desulfovibrionaceae. In contrast with no significant changes
in alpha diversity, time- and localization-dependent effects in beta-diversity
were clearly observed. In terms of enzymatic functions the HFD group
showed strong affected metabolic pathways such as energy production
and carbohydrate metabolism. In vivo isotope labeling combined with
metaproteomics provides a valuable method to distinguish the active
from the non-active bacterial phylogenetic groups that are relevant
for microbiota–host interaction. For morbid obesity such analysis
may provide potentially new strategies for targeted pre- or probiotic
treatments.