Isolation of Genetically Tractable Most-Wanted Bacteria by Metaparental Mating
Metagenomics has rapidly advanced our inventory and appreciation of the genetic potential inherent to the gut microbiome. However it is widely accepted that two key constraints to further genetic dissection of the gut microbiota and host-microbe interactions have been our inability to recover new is...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Scientific reports 2015-08, Vol.5 (1), p.13282-13282, Article 13282 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Metagenomics has rapidly advanced our inventory and appreciation of the genetic potential inherent to the gut microbiome. However it is widely accepted that two key constraints to further genetic dissection of the gut microbiota and host-microbe interactions have been our inability to recover new isolates from the human gut and the paucity of genetically tractable gut microbes. To address this challenge we developed a modular RP4 mobilisable recombinant vector system and an approach termed metaparental mating to support the rapid and directed isolation of genetically tractable fastidious gut bacteria. Using this approach we isolated transconjugants affiliated with
Clostridium
cluster IV (
Faecalibacterium
and
Oscillibacter
spp.),
Clostridium
cluster XI (
Anaerococcus
) and
Clostridium
XIVa (
Blautia
spp.) and group 2 ruminococci amongst others and demonstrated that the recombinant vectors were stably maintained in their recipient hosts. By a similar approach we constructed fluorescently labelled bacterial transconjugants affiliated with
Clostridium
cluster IV (including
Flavonifractor
and
Pseudoflavonifractor
spp.),
Clostridium
XIVa (
Blautia
spp.) and
Clostridium
cluster XVIII (
Clostridium ramosum
) that expressed a flavin mononucleotide-based reporter gene (
evoglow-C-Bs2
). Our approach will advance the integration of bacterial genetics with metagenomics and realize new directions to support a more mechanistic dissection of host-microbe associations relevant to human health and disease. |
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ISSN: | 2045-2322 2045-2322 |
DOI: | 10.1038/srep13282 |