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Wild Mouse Gut Microbiota Promotes Host Fitness and Improves Disease Resistance. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Laboratory mice are essential for studying biology but often fail to model complex human diseases due to differences in their gut microbiomes.
  • Researchers identified a wild mouse population with a microbiome that significantly differs from typical lab mice and found that transferring this microbiome can improve lab mice's health.
  • Mice with the natural microbiome showed reduced inflammation and better resistance to diseases, suggesting that understanding these microbiomes could enhance research on complex diseases in wild mammals.

Article Abstract

Laboratory mice, while paramount for understanding basic biological phenomena, are limited in modeling complex diseases of humans and other free-living mammals. Because the microbiome is a major factor in mammalian physiology, we aimed to identify a naturally evolved reference microbiome to better recapitulate physiological phenomena relevant in the natural world outside the laboratory. Among 21 distinct mouse populations worldwide, we identified a closely related wild relative to standard laboratory mouse strains. Its bacterial gut microbiome differed significantly from its laboratory mouse counterpart and was transferred to and maintained in laboratory mice over several generations. Laboratory mice reconstituted with natural microbiota exhibited reduced inflammation and increased survival following influenza virus infection and improved resistance against mutagen/inflammation-induced colorectal tumorigenesis. By demonstrating the host fitness-promoting traits of natural microbiota, our findings should enable the discovery of protective mechanisms relevant in the natural world and improve the modeling of complex diseases of free-living mammals. VIDEO ABSTRACT.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6887100PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2017.09.016DOI Listing

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