Paternal microbiome perturbations impact offspring fitness

Ayele Argaw-Denboba(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Thomas Schmidt(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Monica Di Giacomo(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Bobby Ranjan(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Saravanan Devendran(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Eleonora Mastrorilli(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Catrin T Lloyd(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), D Pugliese(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Violetta Paribeni(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Juliette Dabin(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Alessandra Pisaniello(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Sergio Espínola(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Álvaro H. Crevenna(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Subhanita Ghosh(University of Oxford), Neil Humphreys(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Olga Boruc(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Peter Sarkies(University of Oxford), Michael Zimmermann(European Molecular Biology Laboratory), Peer Bork(Yonsei University), Jamie A. Hackett(European Molecular Biology Laboratory)
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Abstract

Abstract The gut microbiota operates at the interface of host–environment interactions to influence human homoeostasis and metabolic networks 1–4 . Environmental factors that unbalance gut microbial ecosystems can therefore shape physiological and disease-associated responses across somatic tissues 5–9 . However, the systemic impact of the gut microbiome on the germline—and consequently on the F 1 offspring it gives rise to—is unexplored 10 . Here we show that the gut microbiota act as a key interface between paternal preconception environment and intergenerational health in mice. Perturbations to the gut microbiota of prospective fathers increase the probability of their offspring presenting with low birth weight, severe growth restriction and premature mortality. Transmission of disease risk occurs via the germline and is provoked by pervasive gut microbiome perturbations, including non-absorbable antibiotics or osmotic laxatives, but is rescued by restoring the paternal microbiota before conception. This effect is linked with a dynamic response to induced dysbiosis in the male reproductive system, including impaired leptin signalling, altered testicular metabolite profiles and remapped small RNA payloads in sperm. As a result, dysbiotic fathers trigger an elevated risk of in utero placental insufficiency, revealing a placental origin of mammalian intergenerational effects. Our study defines a regulatory ‘gut–germline axis’ in males, which is sensitive to environmental exposures and programmes offspring fitness through impacting placenta function.


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