Rat microbial biogeography and age-dependent lactic acid bacteria in healthy lungs.
Lan ZhaoChristine M CunninghamAdam M AndruskaKatharina SchimmelMd Khadem AliDongeon KimShenbiao GuJason Lon ChangEdda SpiekerkoetterMark Robert NicollsPublished in: Lab animal (2024)
The laboratory rat emerges as a useful tool for studying the interaction between the host and its microbiome. To advance principles relevant to the human microbiome, we systematically investigated and defined the multitissue microbial biogeography of healthy Fischer 344 rats across their lifespan. Microbial community profiling data were extracted and integrated with host transcriptomic data from the Sequencing Quality Control consortium. Unsupervised machine learning, correlation, taxonomic diversity and abundance analyses were performed to determine and characterize the rat microbial biogeography and identify four intertissue microbial heterogeneity patterns (P1-P4). We found that the 11 body habitats harbored a greater diversity of microbes than previously suspected. Lactic acid bacteria (LAB) abundance progressively declined in lungs from breastfed newborn to adolescence/adult, and was below detectable levels in elderly rats. Bioinformatics analyses indicate that the abundance of LAB may be modulated by the lung-immune axis. The presence and levels of LAB in lungs were further evaluated by PCR in two validation datasets. The lung, testes, thymus, kidney, adrenal and muscle niches were found to have age-dependent alterations in microbial abundance. The 357 microbial signatures were positively correlated with host genes in cell proliferation (P1), DNA damage repair (P2) and DNA transcription (P3). Our study established a link between the metabolic properties of LAB with lung microbiota maturation and development. Breastfeeding and environmental exposure influence microbiome composition and host health and longevity. The inferred rat microbial biogeography and pattern-specific microbial signatures could be useful for microbiome therapeutic approaches to human health and life quality enhancement.
Keyphrases
- microbial community
- antibiotic resistance genes
- machine learning
- human health
- lactic acid
- dna damage
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- cell proliferation
- risk assessment
- genome wide
- healthcare
- big data
- endothelial cells
- quality control
- electronic health record
- preterm infants
- mass spectrometry
- single molecule
- real time pcr
- community dwelling