PLoS ONE (Jan 2016)

Dietary Regulation of the Gut Microbiota Engineered by a Minimal Defined Bacterial Consortium.

  • Ting-Chin David Shen,
  • Christel Chehoud,
  • Josephine Ni,
  • Evelyn Hsu,
  • Ying-Yu Chen,
  • Aubrey Bailey,
  • Alice Laughlin,
  • Kyle Bittinger,
  • Frederic D Bushman,
  • Gary D Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0155620
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. e0155620

Abstract

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We have recently reported that Altered Schaedler Flora (ASF) can be used to durably engineer the gut microbiota to reduce ammonia production as an effective modality to reduce morbidity and mortality in the setting of liver injury. Here we investigated the effects of a low protein diet on ASF colonization and its ability to engineer the microbiota. Initially, ASF inoculation was similar between mice fed a normal protein diet or low protein diet, but the outgrowth of gut microbiota differed over the ensuing month. Notable was the inability of the dominant Parabacteroides ASF taxon to exclude other taxa belonging to the Bacteroidetes phylum in the setting of a low protein diet. Instead, a poorly classified yet highly represented Bacteroidetes family, S24-7, returned within 4 weeks of inoculation in mice fed a low protein diet, demonstrating a reduction in ASF resilience in response to dietary stress. Nevertheless, fecal ammonia levels remained significantly lower than those observed in mice on the same low protein diet that received a transplant of normal feces. No deleterious effects were observed in host physiology due to ASF inoculation into mice on a low protein diet. In total, these results demonstrate that low protein diet can have a pronounced effect on engineering the gut microbiota but modulation of ammonia is preserved.