Autochthonous faecal virome transplantation (FVT) reshapes the murine microbiome after antibiotic perturbation

Archive ouverte

Draper, Lorraine A. | Ryan, Feargal, J | Dalmasso, Marion | Casey, Pat G. | Mccann, Angela | Vimalkumar, Velayudhan | Ross, R. Paul | Hill, Colin

Edité par CCSD -

Background It has become increasingly apparent that establishing and maintaining a complex and diverse gut microbiome is fundamental to human health. There are growing efforts to identify methods that can modulate and influence the microbiome, especially in individuals who due to disease or circumstance have experienced a disruption in their native microbiome. Faecal microbial transplantation (FMT) is one method that restores diversity to the microbiome of an individual by introducing microbes from a healthy donor. FMT introduces a complete microbiome into the recipient, including the bacteriome, archaeome, mycome and virome. In this study we investigated whether transplanting an autochthonous faecal virome consisting primarily of bacteriophages could impact a bacteriome disrupted by antibiotic treatment (Faecal Virome Transplantation; FVT).Results Following disruption of the bacteriome by penicillin and streptomycin, test mice (n=8) received a bacteria free, faecal transplant, while Control mice (n=8) received a heated and nuclease treated control. The bacteriomes (as determined via 16S rRNA sequencing) of mice that received an FVT, in which bacteriophages predominate, separated from those of the Control mice as determined by principle co-ordinate analysis (PCoA), and contained differentially abundant taxa that reshaped the bacteriome profile such that it more closely resembled that of the pre-treatment mice. Similarly, metagenomic sequencing of the virome confirmed that the bacteriophages present in the gut of treatment and Control mice differed over time in both abundance and diversity, with transplanted phages seen to colonise the FVT mice.Conclusions An autochthonous virome transplant impacts on the bacteriome and virome of mice following antibiotic treatment. The virome, consisting mainly of bacteriophages, reshapes the bacteriome such that it more closely resembles the pre-antibiotic state. To date, faecal transplants have largely focussed on transferring living microbes, but given that bacteriophage are inert biological entities incapable of colonising in the absence of a sensitive host they could form a viable alternative that may have fewer safety implications and that could be delivered as a robust formulation.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Reproducible protocols for metagenomic analysis of human faecal phageomes

Archive ouverte | Shkoporov, Andrey, N | CCSD

International audience. Background: Recent studies have demonstrated that the human gut is populated by complex, highly individual and stable communities of viruses, the majority of which are bacteriophages. While d...

Guidance for creating individual and batch latinized binomial virus species names

Archive ouverte | Postler, Thomas, S | CCSD

International audience. The International Committee on Taxonomy of Viruses recently adopted, and is gradually implementing, a binomial naming format for virus species. Although full Latinization of these names remai...

Viral Dark Matter in the Gut Virome of Elderly Humans

Archive ouverte | Stockdale, Stephen, R | CCSD

The human virome is an area of increasing interest with relation to human health and disease. It has been demonstrated to alter in concert with the bacterial microbiome in early life and was also found to be different in patients ...

Chargement des enrichissements...