AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how the bacteria serovar Typhimurium reacts to different diets (fibrous vs. high-fat) over time in mice, focusing on its metabolic responses and implications for antibiotic resistance.
  • Findings indicate that mice on a high-fat diet showed increased inflammation, affecting gene expression related to respiration and infection phases (early, peak, late), highlighting the bacteria's adaptability.
  • The research suggests that understanding these dietary influences on serovar Typhimurium could lead to new therapeutic strategies to combat infections, especially amid rising antibiotic resistance.

Article Abstract

With a rise in antibiotic resistance and chronic infection, the metabolic response of serovar Typhimurium to various dietary conditions over time remains an understudied avenue for novel, targeted therapeutics. Elucidating how enteric pathogens respond to dietary variation not only helps us decipher the metabolic strategies leveraged for expansion but also assists in proposing targets for therapeutic interventions. In this study, we use a multi-omics approach to identify the metabolic response of serovar Typhimurium in mice on both a fibrous diet and high-fat diet over time. When comparing gene expression between diets, we found a preferential use of respiratory electron acceptors consistent with increased inflammation in high-fat diet mice. Looking at the high-fat diet over the course of infection, we noticed heterogeneity in samples based on ribosomal activity, which is separated into three infection phases: early, peak, and late. We identified key respiratory, carbon, and pathogenesis gene expressions descriptive of each phase. Surprisingly, we identified genes associated with host cell entry expressed throughout infection, suggesting subpopulations of or stress-induced dysregulation. Collectively, these results highlight not only the sensitivity of to its environment but also identify phase-specific genes that may be used as therapeutic targets to reduce infection.IMPORTANCEIdentifying novel therapeutic strategies for infection that occur in relevant diets and over time is needed with the rise of antibiotic resistance and global shifts toward Western diets that are high in fat and low in fiber. Mice on a high-fat diet are more inflamed compared to those on a fibrous diet, creating an environment that results in more favorable energy generation for . We observed differential gene expression across infection phases in mice over time on a high-fat diet. Together, these findings reveal the metabolic tuning of to dietary and temporal perturbations. Research like this, which explores the dimensions of pathogen metabolic plasticity, can pave the way for rationally designed strategies to control disease.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11520297PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1128/msphere.00534-24DOI Listing

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