Analysis of early childhood intestinal microbial dynamics in a continuous-flow bioreactor
-, -; Granato, Alessandra; Renwick, Simone; Yau, Christopher; Kong, Tiffany; Daigneault, Michelle C.; Knip, Mikael; Allen-Vercoe, Emma; Danska, Jayne S. (2024-12)
-, -
Granato, Alessandra
Renwick, Simone
Yau, Christopher
Kong, Tiffany
Daigneault, Michelle C.
Knip, Mikael
Allen-Vercoe, Emma
Danska, Jayne S.
12 / 2024
Microbiome
255
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-2024123111774
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-2024123111774
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
<p>Background: The human gut microbiota is inoculated at birth and undergoes a process of assembly and diversification during the first few years of life. Studies in mice and humans have revealed associations between the early-life gut microbiome and future susceptibility to immune and metabolic diseases. To resolve microbe and host contributing factors to early-life development and to disease states requires experimental platforms that support reproducible, longitudinal, and high-content analyses. Results: Here, we deployed a continuous single-stage chemostat culture model of the human distal gut to study gut microbiota from 18- to 24-month-old children integrating both culture-dependent and -independent methods. Chemostat cultures recapitulated multiple aspects of the fecal microbial ecosystem enabling investigation of relationships between bacterial strains and metabolic function, as well as a resource from which we isolated and curated a diverse library of early life bacterial strains. Conclusions: We report the reproducible, longitudinal dynamics of early-life bacterial communities cultured in an advanced model of the human gut providing an experimental approach and a characterized bacterial resource to support future investigations of the human gut microbiota in early childhood.</p>
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [20036]