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What do we mean when we refer to Bacteroidetes populations in the human gastrointestinal microbiota?
Authors:Lesley Hoyles  & Anne L McCartney
Institution:Microbial Ecology and Health Group, Food Microbial Sciences Unit, School of Chemistry, Food Biosciences and Pharmacy, University of Reading, Berkshire, UK
Abstract:Recent large-scale cloning studies have shown that the ratio of Bacteroidetes to Firmicutes may be important in the obesity-associated gut microbiota, but the species these phyla represent in this ecosystem has not been examined. The Bacteroidetes data from the recent Turnbaugh study were examined to determine those members of the phylum detected in human faecal samples. In addition, FISH analysis was performed on faecal samples from 17 healthy, nonobese donors using probe Bac303, routinely used by gut microbiologists to enumerate Bacteroides – Prevotella populations in faecal samples, and another probe (CFB286) whose target range has some overlap with that of Bac303. Sequence analysis of the Turnbaugh data showed that 23/519 clones were chimeras or erroneous sequences; all good sequences were related to species of the order Bacteroidales , but no one species was present in all donors. FISH analysis demonstrated that approximately one-quarter of the healthy, nonobese donors harboured high numbers of Bacteroidales not detected by probe Bac303. It is clear that Bacteroidales populations in human faecal samples have been underestimated in FISH-based studies. New probes and complementary primer sets should be designed to examine numerical and compositional changes in the Bacteroidales during dietary interventions and in studies of the obesity-associated microbiota in humans and animal model systems.
Keywords:Bacteroidetes                        Porphyromonadaceae                        Prevotellaceae                        Bacteroidaceae            FISH              Rikenellaceae
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