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1.
Gut Microbes ; 16(1): 2350150, 2024.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38841888

RESUMO

Comensal Bacteroidota (Bacteroidota) and Enterobacteriacea are often linked to gut inflammation. However, the causes for variability of pro-inflammatory surface antigens that affect gut commensal/opportunistic dualism in Bacteroidota remain unclear. By using the classical lipopolysaccharide/O-antigen 'rfb operon' in Enterobacteriaceae as a surface antigen model (5-rfb-gene-cluster rfbABCDX), and a recent rfbA-typing strategy for strain classification, we characterized the integrity and conservancy of the entire rfb operon in Bacteroidota. Through exploratory analysis of complete genomes and metagenomes, we discovered that most Bacteroidota have the rfb operon fragmented into nonrandom patterns of gene-singlets and doublets/triplets, termed 'rfb-gene-clusters', or rfb-'minioperons' if predicted as transcriptional. To reflect global operon integrity, contiguity, duplication, and fragmentation principles, we propose a six-category (infra/supra-numerary) cataloging system and a Global Operon Profiling System for bacteria. Mechanistically, genomic sequence analyses revealed that operon fragmentation is driven by intra-operon insertions of predominantly Bacteroides-DNA (thetaiotaomicron/fragilis) and likely natural selection in gut-wall specific micro-niches or micropathologies. Bacteroides-insertions, also detected in other antigenic operons (fimbriae), but not in operons deemed essential (ribosomal), could explain why Bacteroidota have fewer KEGG-pathways despite large genomes. DNA insertions, overrepresenting DNA-exchange-avid (Bacteroides) species, impact our interpretation of functional metagenomics data by inflating by inflating gene-based pathway inference and by overestimating 'extra-species' abundance. Of disease relevance, Bacteroidota species isolated from cavitating/cavernous fistulous tract (CavFT) microlesions in Crohn's Disease have supra-numerary fragmented operons, stimulate TNF-alpha from macrophages with low potency, and do not induce hyperacute peritonitis in mice compared to CavFT Enterobacteriaceae. The impact of 'foreign-DNA' insertions on pro-inflammatory operons, metagenomics, and commensalism/opportunism requires further studies to elucidate their potential for novel diagnostics and therapeutics, and to elucidate the role of co-existing pathobionts in Crohn's disease microlesions.


Assuntos
Doença de Crohn , Microbioma Gastrointestinal , Metagenômica , Óperon , Camundongos , Animais , Humanos , Doença de Crohn/microbiologia , Doença de Crohn/genética , Bacteroidetes/genética , Bacteroidetes/classificação , Antígenos de Bactérias/genética , Genoma Bacteriano , Enterobacteriaceae/genética , Enterobacteriaceae/classificação
2.
bioRxiv ; 2024 Jan 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38260564

RESUMO

Crohn's disease (CD) has been traditionally viewed as a chronic inflammatory disease that cause gut wall thickening and complications, including fistulas, by mechanisms not understood. By focusing on Parabacteroides distasonis (presumed modern succinate-producing commensal probiotic), recovered from intestinal microfistulous tracts (cavernous fistulous micropathologies CavFT proposed as intermediate between 'mucosal fissures' and 'fistulas') in two patients that required surgery to remove CD-damaged ilea, we demonstrate that such isolates exert pathogenic/pathobiont roles in mouse models of CD. Our isolates are clonally-related; potentially emerging as transmissible in the community and mice; proinflammatory and adapted to the ileum of germ-free mice prone to CD-like ileitis (SAMP1/YitFc) but not healthy mice (C57BL/6J), and cytotoxic/ATP-depleting to HoxB8-immortalized bone marrow derived myeloid cells from SAMP1/YitFc mice when concurrently exposed to succinate and extracts from CavFT-derived E. coli , but not to cells from healthy mice. With unique genomic features supporting recent genetic exchange with Bacteroides fragilis -BGF539, evidence of international presence in primarily human metagenome databases, these CavFT Pdis isolates could represent to a new opportunistic Parabacteroides species, or subspecies (' cavitamuralis' ) adapted to microfistulous niches in CD.

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