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In Situ Live Imaging of Gut Microbiota.

Zhi ZhangDuo XuJianyang FangDai WangJie ZengXiaodong LiuShouqiang HongYunxin XueXianzhong ZhangXilin Zhao
Published in: mSphere (2021)
Most studies of gut microbiota have focused on relationships between a specific disease and the presence/abundance of one or a few bacterial species/genera. Whether the spatial and temporal distribution of gut microbiota, as a whole, affects or correlates with health is unknown, largely due to the absence of tools for dynamically monitoring the overall gut microbiota landscape inside living subjects. Here, we describe a novel, noninvasive, live imaging method for gut microbiota using 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-sorbitol (18F-FDS), a compound that specifically labeled gut bacteria in mice and hamsters following oral administration. Positron emission tomography-computed tomography (PET-CT) scanning showed that the radiolabel signal was concentrated in the gut (especially the large intestine), was absent when mice gut microbiota was depleted by antibiotic treatment, and was restored after transplanting antibiotic-treated mice with a fecal or probiotic bacterial mixture. Thus, 18F-FDS images microbiota, not gut tissue. The tissue distribution of 18F-FDS was the highest in the gut (∼3-fold higher than average), in contrast to 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-glucose, which concentrated in brain and many other organs. 2-[18F]fluoro-aminobenzoic acid, another bacterium-specific radioactive tracer, was unsuited for gut microbiota imaging due to unexpected stomach retention following oral administration. When similar gut microbiota imaging was done with hamsters, the spatial resolution increased significantly over that with mice, suggesting that even higher spatial resolution can be achieved with humans or large animals. Thus, our work establishes a new tool for noninvasive, live imaging of gut microbiota; the new tool may enable exploration of relationships between gut microbiota landscape and diseases in clinical settings. IMPORTANCE Gut microbiota dysbiosis correlates with many diseases, but such correlations derive mostly from relationships between one or a few bacteria and a particular disease. Since microbiota resemble complex forest ecosystems more closely than individual patches of trees, the overall landscape (spatial and temporal distribution) of gut bacteria may also affect/reflect disease development. Such a possibility has not been explored due to a lack of tools for directly visualizing natural landscape patterns of gut microbiota. The present work identified 2-deoxy-2-[18F]fluoro-d-sorbitol as a gut microbiota-specific radioactive tracer and developed a novel PET-CT scan-based imaging method that enables noninvasive, real-time imaging of the overall gut bacterial landscape. The method showed increased spatial resolution when hamsters replaced mice, suggesting that even higher spatial resolution could be achieved with larger animals such as humans. This novel technology establishes the feasibility of investigating spatial-temporal distribution dynamics of gut microbiota with many human diseases.
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