Acetobacter pomorum in the Drosophila gut microbiota buffers against host metabolic impacts of dietary preservative formula and batch variation in dietary yeast

Gut microbiota are fundamentally important for healthy function in animal hosts. is a powerful system for understanding host-microbiota interactions, with modulation of the microbiota inducing phenotypic changes that are conserved across animal taxa. Qualitative differences in diet, such as preserva...

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Veröffentlicht in:Applied and environmental microbiology 2023-10, Vol.89 (10), p.e0016523-e0016523
Hauptverfasser: Sannino, David R, Dobson, Adam J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gut microbiota are fundamentally important for healthy function in animal hosts. is a powerful system for understanding host-microbiota interactions, with modulation of the microbiota inducing phenotypic changes that are conserved across animal taxa. Qualitative differences in diet, such as preservatives and dietary yeast batch variation, may affect fly health indirectly via microbiota, and may potentially have hitherto uncharacterized effects directly on the fly. These factors are rarely considered, controlled, and are not standardized among laboratories. Here, we show that the microbiota's impact on fly triacylglyceride (TAG) levels-a commonly-measured metabolic index-depends on both preservatives and yeast, and combinatorial interactions among the three variables. In studies of conventional, axenic, and gnotobiotic flies, we found that microbial impacts were apparent only on specific yeast-by-preservative conditions, with TAG levels determined by a tripartite interaction of the three experimental factors. When comparing axenic and conventional flies, we found that preservatives caused more variance in host TAG than microbiota status, and certain yeast-preservative combinations even reversed effects of microbiota on TAG. Preservatives had major effects in axenic flies, suggesting either direct effects on the fly or indirect effects via media. However, buffers the fly against this effect, despite the preservatives inhibiting growth, indicating that this bacterium benefits the host in the face of mutual environmental toxicity. Our results suggest that antimicrobial preservatives have major impacts on host TAG, and that microbiota modulates host TAG dependent on the combination of the dietary factors of preservative formula and yeast batch. IMPORTANCE is a premier model for microbiome science, which has greatly enhanced our understanding of the basic biology of host-microbe interactions. However, often overlooked factors such as dietary composition, including yeast batch variability and preservative formula, may confound data interpretation of experiments within the same lab and lead to different findings when comparing between labs. Our study supports this notion; we find that the microbiota does not alter host TAG levels independently. Rather, TAG is modulated by combinatorial effects of microbiota, yeast batch, and preservative formula. Specific preservatives increase TAG even in germ-free flies, showing that a commonplace procedure in fly husbandry alte
ISSN:0099-2240
1098-5336
DOI:10.1128/aem.00165-23