Author:
Repoila F.,Le Bohec F.,Guérin C.,Lacoux C.,Tiwari S.,Jaiswal A. K.,Santana M. Passos,Kennedy S. P.,Quinquis B.,Rainteau D.,Juillard V.,Furlan S.,Bouloc P.,Nicolas P.,Miyoshi A.,Azevedo V.,Serror P.
Abstract
AbstractEnterococcus faecalis is a natural inhabitant of the human gastrointestinal tract. This bacterial species is subdominant in a healthy physiological state of the gut microbiota (eubiosis) in adults, but can become dominant and cause infections when the intestinal homeostasis is disrupted (dysbiosis). The relatively high concentrations of bile acids deoxycholate (DCA) and taurocholate (TCA) hallmark eubiosis and dysbiosis, respectively. This study aimed to better understand how E. faecalis adapts to DCA and TCA. We showed that DCA impairs E. faecalis growth and possibly imposes a continuous adjustment in the expression of many essential genes, including a majority of ribosomal proteins. This may account for slow growth and low levels of E. faecalis in the gut. In contrast, TCA had no detectable growth effect. The evolving transcriptome upon TCA adaptation showed the early activation of an oligopeptide permease system (opp2) followed by the adjustment of amino acid and nucleotide metabolisms. We provide evidence that TCA favors the exploitation of oligopeptide resources to fuel amino acid needs in limiting oligopeptide conditions. Altogether, our data suggest that the combined effects of decreased DCA and increased TCA concentrations can contribute to the rise of E. faecalis population during dysbiosis.
Funder
Agence Nationale de la Recherche
Institut National de Recherche pour l'Agriculture, l'Alimentation et l'Environnement
Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Science without borders _CNPq
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Cited by
12 articles.
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