Resilience of small intestinal beneficial bacteria to the toxicity of soybean oil fatty acids.
Sara C Di RienziJuliet JacobsonElizabeth A KennedyMary E BellQiaojuan ShiJillian L WatersPeter LawrenceJ Thomas BrennaRobert A BrittonJens WalterRuth E LeyPublished in: eLife (2018)
Over the past century, soybean oil (SBO) consumption in the United States increased dramatically. The main SBO fatty acid, linoleic acid (18:2), inhibits in vitro the growth of lactobacilli, beneficial members of the small intestinal microbiota. Human-associated lactobacilli have declined in prevalence in Western microbiomes, but how dietary changes may have impacted their ecology is unclear. Here, we compared the in vitro and in vivo effects of 18:2 on Lactobacillus reuteri and L. johnsonii. Directed evolution in vitro in both species led to strong 18:2 resistance with mutations in genes for lipid biosynthesis, acid stress, and the cell membrane or wall. Small-intestinal Lactobacillus populations in mice were unaffected by chronic and acute 18:2 exposure, yet harbored both 18:2- sensitive and resistant strains. This work shows that extant small intestinal lactobacilli are protected from toxic dietary components via the gut environment as well as their own capacity to evolve resistance.
Keyphrases
- fatty acid
- endothelial cells
- liver failure
- risk factors
- oxidative stress
- drug induced
- climate change
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- lactic acid
- genome wide
- genetic diversity
- respiratory failure
- south africa
- pluripotent stem cells
- high fat diet induced
- type diabetes
- intensive care unit
- aortic dissection
- gene expression
- heat stress
- dna methylation
- mechanical ventilation