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The macaque gut microbiome
in health, lentiviral infection, and chronic enterocolitis
McKenna P, Hoffmann C, Minkah N, Aye PP, Lackner A, Liu Z,
Lozupone CA, Hamady M, Knight R, Bushman FD. (2008) PLoS
Pathog. 4(2):e20.
The vertebrate gut harbors a vast community of bacterial mutualists,
the composition of which is modulated by the host immune system.
Many gastrointestinal (GI) diseases are expected to be associated
with disruptions of host-bacterial interactions, but relatively
few comprehensive studies have been reported. We have used
the rhesus macaque model to investigate forces shaping GI bacterial
communities. We used DNA bar coding and pyrosequencing to characterize
141,000 sequences of 16S rRNA genes obtained from 100 uncultured
GI bacterial samples, allowing quantitative analysis of community
composition in health and disease. Microbial communities of
macaques were distinct from those of mice and humans in both
abundance and types of taxa present. The macaque communities
differed among samples from intestinal mucosa, colonic contents,
and stool, paralleling studies of humans. Communities also
differed among animals, over time within individual animals,
and between males and females. To investigate changes associated
with disease, samples of colonic contents taken at necropsy
were compared between healthy animals and animals with colitis
and undergoing antibiotic therapy. Communities from diseased
and healthy animals also differed significantly in composition.
This work provides comprehensive data and improved methods
for studying the role of commensal microbiota in macaque models
of GI diseases and provides a model for the large-scale screening
of the human gut microbiome.
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