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A synthetic microbial consortium protects against obesity by regulating vitamin B6 metabolism.


ABSTRACT: Constructing synthetic microbial consortia is a challenging task but holds enormous potential for various applications. Our previous droplet-based microfluidic approach allowed for the isolation of bacteria that could utilize metabolites from an engineered bacterium BsS-RS06551 with anti-obesity potential, facilitating the construction of synthetic microbial consortia. Here, we identified a strain of Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum JJ3 that interacted with BsS-RS06551, and in vitro coculture showed that BsS-RS06551 was likely to interact with JJ3 through five dipeptides. Pathway analysis revealed that the vitamin B6 metabolism pathway was enriched in the coculture of BsS-RS06551 and JJ3 compared with the individual culture of BsS-RS06551. Additionally, we confirmed that the administration of JJ3 significantly alleviated obesity and related disorders in mice fed a high-fat diet. Notably, continuous ingestion of the synthetic microbial consortium comprising BsS-RS06551 and JJ3 not only exhibited a more pronounced impact on alleviating obesity compared to the individual administration of BsS-RS06551 or JJ3 but also enriched the population of Bifidobacterium longum and perturbed the vitamin B6 metabolism pathway in the gut. Synthetic microbial consortia represent a promising frontier for synthetic biology, and our strategy provides guidance for constructing and applying such consortia.

SUBMITTER: Chen X 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10813659 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Jan-Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A synthetic microbial consortium protects against obesity by regulating vitamin B6 metabolism.

Chen Xiuzhao X   Gao Mengxue M   Wang Lina L   Qiang Guifen G   Wu Yili Y   Huang He H   Kang Guangbo G  

Gut microbes 20240125 1


Constructing synthetic microbial consortia is a challenging task but holds enormous potential for various applications. Our previous droplet-based microfluidic approach allowed for the isolation of bacteria that could utilize metabolites from an engineered bacterium BsS-RS06551 with anti-obesity potential, facilitating the construction of synthetic microbial consortia. Here, we identified a strain of <i>Bifidobacterium pseudocatenulatum</i> JJ3 that interacted with BsS-RS06551, and in vitro cocu  ...[more]

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