Broad Conservation of Milk Utilization Genes in Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis as Revealed by Comparative Genomic Hybridization

Author:

LoCascio Riccardo G.12,Desai Prerak34,Sela David A.12,Weimer Bart4,Mills David A.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Viticulture and Enology, Robert Mondavi Center for Wine and Food Science

2. Microbiology Graduate Group, University of California, Davis, California 95616

3. Department of Nutrition, Dietetics, and Food Sciences, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, 84322

4. Department of Population Health and Reproduction, School of Veterinary Medicine, University of California, Davis, California 95616

Abstract

ABSTRACT Human milk oligosaccharides (HMOs) are the third-largest solid component of milk. Their structural complexity renders them nondigestible to the host but liable to hydrolytic enzymes of the infant colonic microbiota. Bifidobacteria and, frequently, Bifidobacterium longum strains predominate the colonic microbiota of exclusively breast-fed infants. Among the three recognized subspecies of B. longum , B. longum subsp. infantis achieves high levels of cell growth on HMOs and is associated with early colonization of the infant gut. The B. longum subsp. infantis ATCC 15697 genome features five distinct gene clusters with the predicted capacity to bind, cleave, and import milk oligosaccharides. Comparative genomic hybridizations (CGHs) were used to associate genotypic biomarkers among 15 B. longum strains exhibiting various HMO utilization phenotypes and host associations. Multilocus sequence typing provided taxonomic subspecies designations and grouped the strains between B. longum subsp. infantis and B. longum subsp. longum . CGH analysis determined that HMO utilization gene regions are exclusively conserved across all B. longum subsp. infantis strains capable of growth on HMOs and have diverged in B. longum subsp. longum strains that cannot grow on HMOs. These regions contain fucosidases, sialidases, glycosyl hydrolases, ABC transporters, and family 1 solute binding proteins and are likely needed for efficient metabolism of HMOs. Urea metabolism genes and their activity were exclusively conserved in B. longum subsp. infantis . These results imply that the B. longum has at least two distinct subspecies: B. longum subsp. infantis , specialized to utilize milk carbon, and B. longum subsp. longum , specialized for plant-derived carbon metabolism.

Publisher

American Society for Microbiology

Subject

Ecology,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Food Science,Biotechnology

Reference57 articles.

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