The Host-specific Microbiota is Required for Diet-Specific Metabolic Homeostasis

Author:

Fei Na,Xie Bingqing,Long Tyler J.,StGeorge Marissa,Tan Alan,Manzoor Sumeed,Sidebottom Ashley M.,Spedale Melanie,Theriault Betty R,Sulakhe Dinanath,Chang Eugene B.

Abstract

AbstractIn complex mammals, the importance and host-specificity of microbial communities have been demonstrated through their positive effects on host immune fitness or performance. However, whether host metabolic physiology homeostasis depends on a specific bacterial community exclusive to the host remains unclear. Here, we show that the coevolved host-specific microbiota is required to maintain diet-specific flexible and sufficient metabolic homeostasis through a high colonization rate, modulating gut metabolites, and related targets. Using germ-free (GF) mice, we tested whether the fitness benefiting the host metabolic phenotype of microbiota was host-specific. We demonstrated that GF mice associated with exogenous microbiota (human microbiota (HM)), which exhibited different and reduced gut microbial species diversity, significantly elevated metabolic rate, and exhibited metabolic insufficiency, all characteristics of GF mice. Strikingly, the absence of the host-specific microbiome attenuated high-fat diet-specific metabolism features. Different diets caused different metabolic changes in only host-specific microbiota-associated mice, not the host-microbiota mismatched mice. While RNA sequencing revealed subtle changes in the expression of genes in the liver, GF mice and HM mice showed considerably altered expression of genes associated with metabolic physiology compared to GF mice associated with host-specific microbiota. The effect of diet outweighed microbiota in the liver transcriptome. These changes occurred in the setting of decreased luminal short-chain fatty acids (SCFAs) and the secondary bile acid (BAs) pool and downstream gut signaling targets in HM and GF mice, which affects whole-body metabolism. These data indicate that a foreign microbial community provides little metabolic benefit to the host when compared to a host-specific microbiome, due to the colonization selection pressure and microbiota-derived metabolites dysfunction. Overall, microbiome fitness effects on the host metabolic phenotype were host-specific. Understanding the impact of the host-specificity of the microbiome on metabolic homeostasis may provide important insights for building a better probiotic.HighlightsMicrobiome fitness effects on the host metabolic phenotype were host-specific in mammals.Human microbiota-associated mice exhibited lower host metabolic fitness or performance, and similar functional costs in GF mice.Different diets cause different metabolic changes only in host-specific microbiota-associated mice, not the host-microbiota mismatched mice.The defective gut microbiota in host-specific microbiota, microbial metabolites and related targets likely drive the metabolic homeostasis.Graphical Abstract

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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