Sequence and cultivation study of Muribaculaceae reveals novel species, host preference, and functional potential of this yet undescribed family

Ilias Lagkouvardos(Leibniz-Institute for Food Systems Biology at the Technical University of Munich), Till Robin Lesker(Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research), Thomas C. A. Hitch(RWTH Aachen University), Eric J. C. Gálvez(Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research), Nathiana Smit(Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research), Klaus Neuhaus(Leibniz-Institute for Food Systems Biology at the Technical University of Munich), Jun Wang(Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology), John F. Baines(Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel), Birte Abt(German Center for Infection Research), Bärbel Stecher(German Center for Infection Research), Jörg Overmann(German Center for Infection Research), Till Strowig(Helmholtz Centre for Infection Research), Thomas Clavel(Leibniz-Institute for Food Systems Biology at the Technical University of Munich)
Microbiome
February 19, 2019
Cited by 781Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Bacteria within family S24-7 (phylum Bacteroidetes) are dominant in the mouse gut microbiota and detected in the intestine of other animals. Because they had not been cultured until recently and the family classification is still ambiguous, interaction with their host was difficult to study and confusion still exists regarding sequence data annotation. METHODS: We investigated family S24-7 by combining data from large-scale 16S rRNA gene analysis and from functional and taxonomic studies of metagenomic and cultured species. RESULTS: A total of 685 species was inferred by full-length 16S rRNA gene sequence clustering. While many species could not be assigned ecological habitats (93,045 samples analyzed), the mouse was the most commonly identified host (average of 20% relative abundance and nine co-occurring species). Shotgun metagenomics allowed reconstruction of 59 molecular species, of which 34 were representative of the 16S rRNA gene-derived species clusters. In addition, cultivation efforts allowed isolating five strains representing three species, including two novel taxa. Genome analysis revealed that S24-7 spp. are functionally distinct from neighboring families and versatile with respect to complex carbohydrate degradation. CONCLUSIONS: We provide novel data on the diversity, ecology, and description of bacterial family S24-7, for which the name Muribaculaceae is proposed.


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