Gene expression of lactobacilli in murine forestomach biofilms
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/25078Date
2014-04-04Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Abstract
Lactobacilli populate the gastro-intestinal tract of vertebrates, and are used in food fermentations and as
probiotics. Lactobacilli are also major constituents of
stable biofilms in the forestomach of rodents. In order
to investigate the lifestyle of these biofilm lactobacilli
in C57BL/6 mice, we applied metatranscriptomics
to analyse gene expression (assessed by mRNA)
and community composition (assessed by rRNA).
Lactobacillales were the major biofilm inhabitants
(62–82% of rRNA reads), followed by Clostridiales
(8–31% of rRNA reads). To identify mRNA transcripts specific for the forestomach, we compared
forestomach and hindgut metatranscriptomes. Gene
expression of the biofilm microbiota was characterized by high abundance of transcripts related to
glucose and maltose utilization, peptide degradation,
and amino acid transport, indicating their major catabolic and anabolic pathways. The microbiota transcribed genes encoding pathways enhancing
oxidative stress (glutathione synthesis) and acid
tolerance. Various pathways, including metabolite
formation (urea degradation, arginine pathway,
γ-aminobutyrate) and cell wall modification (DltA,
cyclopropane-fatty-acyl-phospholipid synthase), contributed to acid tolerance, as judged from the transcript profile. In addition, the biofilm microbiota
expressed numerous genes encoding extracellular
proteins involved in adhesion and/or biofilm formation (e.g. MucBP, glycosyl hydrolase families 68 and 70). This study shed light on the lifestyle and
specific adaptations of lactobacilli in the murine
forestomach that might also be relevant for
lactobacilli biofilms in other vertebrates, including
humans.
Publisher
WileyCitation
Schwab C, Tveit AT, Schleper C, Urich T. Gene expression of lactobacilli in murine forestomach biofilms. Microbial Biotechnology. 2014;7(4):347-359Metadata
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Copyright 2014 The Author(s)