Breast milk urea as a nitrogen source for urease positive Bifidobacterium infantis

Author:

Schimmel Patrick1ORCID,Kleinjans Lennart1,Bongers Roger S2,Knol Jan12,Belzer Clara1

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory of Microbiology, Wageningen University & Research, Stippeneng 4, Helix Building, 6708 WE, Wageningen, the Netherlands

2. Danone Nutricia Research, Uppsalalaan 12, 3584CT Utrecht, the Netherlands

Abstract

ABSTRACT Human milk stimulates a health-promoting gut microbiome in infants. However, it is unclear how the microbiota salvages and processes its required nitrogen from breast milk. Human milk nitrogen sources such as urea could contribute to the composition of this early life microbiome. Urea is abundant in human milk, representing a large part of the non-protein nitrogen (NPN). We found that B. longum subsp. infantis (ATCC17930) can use urea as a main source of nitrogen for growth in synthetic medium and enzyme activity was induced by the presence of urea in the medium. We furthermore confirmed the expression of both urease protein subunits and accessory proteins of B. longum subsp. infantis through proteomics. To the same end, metagenome data were mined for urease-related genes. It was found that the breastfed infant's microbiome possessed more urease-related genes than formula fed infants (51.4:22.1; 2.3-fold increase). Bifidobacteria provided a total of 106 of urease subunit alpha alignments, found only in breastfed infants. These experiments show how an important gut commensal that colonizes the infant intestine can metabolize urea. The results presented herein further indicate how dietary nitrogen can determine bacterial metabolism in the neonate gut and shape the overall microbiome.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology,Ecology,Microbiology

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