Gut Microbes (Jul 2019)

Acute stressor alters inter-species microbial competition for resistant starch-supplemented medium

  • Ida Gisela Pantoja-Feliciano,
  • Jason W. Soares,
  • Laurel A. Doherty,
  • J. Philip Karl,
  • Holly L. McClung,
  • Nicholes J. Armstrong,
  • Tobyn A. Branck,
  • Steven Arcidiacono

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/19490976.2018.1554962
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 4
pp. 439 – 446

Abstract

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Gut microbiome community dynamics are maintained by complex microbe-microbe and microbe-host interactions, which can be disturbed by stress. In vivo studies on the dynamics and manipulation of those interactions are costly and slow, but can be accelerated using in vitro fermentation. Herein, in vitro fermentation was used to determine how an acute stressor, a sudden change in diet, impacts inter-bacterial species competition for resistant starch-supplemented medium (RSM). Fermentation vessels were seeded with fecal samples collected from 10 individuals consuming a habitual diet or U.S. military rations for 21 days. Lactobacillus spp. growth in response to RSM was attenuated following ration consumption, whereas growth of Ruminococcus bromii was enhanced. These differences were not evident in the pre-fermentation samples. Findings demonstrate how incorporating in vitro fermentation into clinical studies can increase understanding of stress-induced changes in nutrient-microbiome dynamics, and suggest that sudden changes in diet may impact inter-species competition for substrates.

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