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Host Age Prediction from Fecal Microbiota Composition in Male C57BL/6J Mice. | LitMetric

Host Age Prediction from Fecal Microbiota Composition in Male C57BL/6J Mice.

Microbiol Spectr

Temasek Life Sciences Laboratorygrid.226688.0, Singapore, Singapore.

Published: June 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The relationship between microorganisms and their hosts significantly influences the health of the holobiont, particularly as the host ages.
  • A study tracked the fecal microbiota of C57BL/6J male mice from 9 weeks to 112 weeks, revealing notable changes in microbiota composition mainly during early to middle adulthood.
  • The research showed that the microbiota could predict the host's age, indicating that age-related changes in gut microbes might affect microbiome studies, and diet was found to also impact microbiota composition and aging predictions.

Article Abstract

The lifelong relationship between microorganisms and hosts has a profound impact on the overall health and physiology of the holobiont. Microbiome composition throughout the life span of a host remains largely understudied. Here, the fecal microbiota of conventionally raised C57BL/6J male mice was characterized throughout almost the entire adult life span, from "maturing" (9 weeks) until "very old" (112 weeks) age. Our results suggest that microbiota changes occur throughout life but are more pronounced in maturing to middle-age mice than in mice later in life. Phylum-level analysis indicates a shift of the -to- ratio in favor of in old and very old mice. More amplicon sequence variants (ASVs) were transient with varying successional patterns than ASVs, which varied primarily during maturation. Microbiota configurations from five defined life phases were used as training sets in a Bayesian model, which effectively enabled the prediction of host age. These results suggest that age-associated compositional differences may have considerable implications for the interpretation and comparability of animal model-based microbiome studies. The sensitivity of the age prediction to dietary perturbations was tested by applying this approach to two age-matched groups of C57BL/6J mice that were fed either a standard or western diet. The predicted age for the western diet-fed animals was on average 27 ± 11 (mean ± standard deviation) weeks older than that of standard diet-fed animals. This indicates that the fecal microbiota-based predicted age may be influenced not only by the host age and physiology but also potentially by other factors such as diet. The gut microbiome of a host changes with age. Cross-sectional studies demonstrate that microbiota of different age groups are distinct but do not demonstrate the temporal change that a longitudinal study is able to show. Here, we performed a longitudinal study of adult mice for over 2 years. We identified life stages where compositional changes were more dynamic and showed temporal changes for the more abundant species. Using a Bayesian model, we could reliably predict the life stages of the mice. Application of the same training set to mice fed different dietary regimens revealed that life-stage age predictions were possible for mice fed the same diet but less so for mice fed different diets. This study sheds light on the temporal changes that occur within the gut microbiota of laboratory mice over their life span and may inform researchers on the appropriate mouse age for their research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9241839PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.00735-22DOI Listing

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