生物
肠道菌群
肠道细菌
细菌
环境卫生
微生物学
免疫学
医学
遗传学
作者
Laura V. Blanton,Mark R. Charbonneau,Tarek Salih,Michael J. Barratt,Siddarth Venkatesh,Olga Ilkaveya,Sathish Subramanian,Mark Manary,Indi Trehan,Josh M Jorgensen,Yue‐Mei Fan,Bernard Henrissat,Semen A. Leyn,Dmitry A. Rodionov,Andrei L. Osterman,Kenneth Maleta,Christopher B. Newgard,Per Ashorn,Kathryn G. Dewey,Jeffrey I. Gordon
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2016-02-19
卷期号:351 (6275)
被引量:671
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.aad3311
摘要
Undernourished children exhibit impaired development of their gut microbiota. Transplanting microbiota from 6- and 18-month-old healthy or undernourished Malawian donors into young germ-free mice that were fed a Malawian diet revealed that immature microbiota from undernourished infants and children transmit impaired growth phenotypes. The representation of several age-discriminatory taxa in recipient animals correlated with lean body mass gain; liver, muscle, and brain metabolism; and bone morphology. Mice were cohoused shortly after receiving microbiota from healthy or severely stunted and underweight infants; age- and growth-discriminatory taxa from the microbiota of the former were able to invade that of the latter, which prevented growth impairments in recipient animals. Adding two invasive species, Ruminococcus gnavus and Clostridium symbiosum, to the microbiota from undernourished donors also ameliorated growth and metabolic abnormalities in recipient animals. These results provide evidence that microbiota immaturity is causally related to undernutrition and reveal potential therapeutic targets and agents.
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