Amino acid auxotrophies in human gut bacteria are linked to higher microbiome diversity and long-term stability

Author:

Starke Svenja1,Harris Danielle M M12ORCID,Zimmermann Johannes34ORCID,Schuchardt Sven5,Oumari Mhmd2,Frank Derk67,Bang Corinna2,Rosenstiel Philip2ORCID,Schreiber Stefan28,Frey Norbert679,Franke Andre2,Aden Konrad28,Waschina Silvio1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Human Nutrition and Food Science, Nutriinformatics, Kiel University , Kiel, Germany

2. Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology, Kiel University , Kiel, Germany

3. Zoological Institute, Research Group Evolutionary Ecology and Genetics, Kiel University , Kiel, Germany

4. Max Planck Institute for Evolutionary Biology , Plön, Germany

5. Fraunhofer Institute for Toxicology and Experimental Medicine (ITEM) , Hanover, Germany

6. Department of Internal Medicine III, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein , Kiel, Germany

7. German Centre for Cardiovascular Research (DZHK), Partner site Hamburg , Kiel, Lübeck, Germany

8. Department of Internal Medicine I, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein , Kiel, Germany

9. Department of Internal Medicine III, University Hospital Heidelberg , Heidelberg, Germany

Abstract

Abstract Amino acid auxotrophies are prevalent among bacteria. They can govern ecological dynamics in microbial communities and indicate metabolic cross-feeding interactions among coexisting genotypes. Despite the ecological importance of auxotrophies, their distribution and impact on the diversity and function of the human gut microbiome remain poorly understood. This study performed the first systematic analysis of the distribution of amino acid auxotrophies in the human gut microbiome using a combined metabolomic, metagenomic, and metabolic modeling approach. Results showed that amino acid auxotrophies are ubiquitous in the colon microbiome, with tryptophan auxotrophy being the most common. Auxotrophy frequencies were higher for those amino acids that are also essential to the human host. Moreover, a higher overall abundance of auxotrophies was associated with greater microbiome diversity and stability, and the distribution of auxotrophs was found to be related to the human host’s metabolome, including trimethylamine oxide, small aromatic acids, and secondary bile acids. Thus, our results suggest that amino acid auxotrophies are important factors contributing to microbiome ecology and host-microbiome metabolic interactions.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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