AI Article Synopsis

  • Isobiotic mice provide a standardized model to study the effects of microbiota on host-microbial relationships over extended periods and across different labs.
  • After a 6-year study, researchers found signs of positive selection in microbial taxa, particularly in genes related to nutrient acquisition and replication.
  • Dietary changes in the mice prompted quick genetic and compositional adjustments in microbial populations, indicating both long-term adaptation through evolution and immediate responses to shifts in diet.

Article Abstract

Isobiotic mice, with an identical stable microbiota composition, potentially allow models of host-microbial mutualism to be studied over time and between different laboratories. To understand microbiota evolution in these models, we carried out a 6-year experiment in mice colonized with 12 representative taxa. Increased non-synonymous to synonymous mutation rates indicate positive selection in multiple taxa, particularly for genes annotated for nutrient acquisition or replication. Microbial sub-strains that evolved within a single taxon can stably coexist, consistent with niche partitioning of ecotypes in the complex intestinal environment. Dietary shifts trigger rapid transcriptional adaptation to macronutrient and micronutrient changes in individual taxa and alterations in taxa biomass. The proportions of different sub-strains are also rapidly altered after dietary shift. This indicates that microbial taxa within a mouse colony adapt to changes in the intestinal environment by long-term genomic positive selection and short-term effects of transcriptional reprogramming and adjustments in sub-strain proportions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2021.02.001DOI Listing

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