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Dominant and diet-responsive groups of bacteria within the human colonic microbiota
Authors:Alan W Walker  Jennifer Ince  Sylvia H Duncan  Lucy M Webster  Grietje Holtrop  Xiaolei Ze  David Brown  Mark D Stares  Paul Scott  Aurore Bergerat  Petra Louis  Freda McIntosh  Alexandra M Johnstone  Gerald E Lobley  Julian Parkhill  Harry J Flint
Institution:1.Pathogen Genomics, Wellcome Trust Sanger Institute, Cambridge, UK;2.Rowett Institute of Nutrition and Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, UK;3.Biomathematics and Statistics Scotland, Aberdeen, UK
Abstract:The populations of dominant species within the human colonic microbiota can potentially be modified by dietary intake with consequences for health. Here we examined the influence of precisely controlled diets in 14 overweight men. Volunteers were provided successively with a control diet, diets high in resistant starch (RS) or non-starch polysaccharides (NSPs) and a reduced carbohydrate weight loss (WL) diet, over 10 weeks. Analysis of 16S rRNA sequences in stool samples of six volunteers detected 320 phylotypes (defined at >98% identity) of which 26, including 19 cultured species, each accounted for >1% of sequences. Although samples clustered more strongly by individual than by diet, time courses obtained by targeted qPCR revealed that ‘blooms'' in specific bacterial groups occurred rapidly after a dietary change. These were rapidly reversed by the subsequent diet. Relatives of Ruminococcus bromii (R-ruminococci) increased in most volunteers on the RS diet, accounting for a mean of 17% of total bacteria compared with 3.8% on the NSP diet, whereas the uncultured Oscillibacter group increased on the RS and WL diets. Relatives of Eubacterium rectale increased on RS (to mean 10.1%) but decreased, along with Collinsella aerofaciens, on WL. Inter-individual variation was marked, however, with >60% of RS remaining unfermented in two volunteers on the RS diet, compared to <4% in the other 12 volunteers; these two individuals also showed low numbers of R-ruminococci (<1%). Dietary non-digestible carbohydrate can produce marked changes in the gut microbiota, but these depend on the initial composition of an individual''s gut microbiota.
Keywords:human colon  resistant starch  16S rRNA  phylotypes  Ruminococcus  temporal change
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