Cell Host & Microbe
Volume 17, Issue 1, 14 January 2015, Pages 72-84
Journal home page for Cell Host & Microbe

Article
Diet Dominates Host Genotype in Shaping the Murine Gut Microbiota

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2014.11.010Get rights and content
Under an Elsevier user license
open archive

Highlights

  • Diet reproducibly alters the gut microbiota of mice with diverse genotypes

  • The gut microbiota exhibits a linear dose response to dietary perturbations

  • Postperturbation, most bacterial taxa reach a new steady state in 3 days

  • Most changes are reversible, but some taxa reflect prior diets (hysteresis)

Summary

Mammals exhibit marked interindividual variations in their gut microbiota, but it remains unclear if this is primarily driven by host genetics or by extrinsic factors like dietary intake. To address this, we examined the effect of dietary perturbations on the gut microbiota of five inbred mouse strains, mice deficient for genes relevant to host-microbial interactions (MyD88−/−, NOD2−/−, ob/ob, and Rag1−/−), and >200 outbred mice. In each experiment, consumption of a high-fat, high-sugar diet reproducibly altered the gut microbiota despite differences in host genotype. The gut microbiota exhibited a linear dose response to dietary perturbations, taking an average of 3.5 days for each diet-responsive bacterial group to reach a new steady state. Repeated dietary shifts demonstrated that most changes to the gut microbiota are reversible, while also uncovering bacteria whose abundance depends on prior consumption. These results emphasize the dominant role that diet plays in shaping interindividual variations in host-associated microbial communities.

Cited by (0)

5

Co-first author