Abstract

BackgroundMembers of the Erysipelotrichaceae family have a high abundance in the intestinal tract of mammals, and have been reported to be associated with host metabolic disorders and inflammatory diseases. In our previous study, we found that the abundance of Erysipelotrichaceae strains in the cecum was associated with the concentration of N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc). However, only a few members of Erysipelotrichaceae have been isolated and cultured, and their main characteristics, genomic information and the functional capacity of carbohydrate metabolism remain unknown.ResultsIn this study, we tested 10 different kinds of commercially available media and successfully isolated five Erysipelotrichaceae strains from healthy porcine feces. The five isolates were Gram-positive, and their colonies on Gifu anaerobic medium (GAM) or modified GAM were approximately 0.25–1.0 mm in diameter, and they were circular, white, convex, moist, translucent, and contained colony margins. These isolates were subjected to Oxford Nanopore and Illumina whole-genome sequencing, genome assembly, and annotation. Based on whole-genome sequences, the five strains belong to Erysipelotrichaceae bacterium OH741_COT-311, Eubacterium sp. AM28–29, and Faecalitalea cylindroides. The GC content of the five strains ranged from 34.1 to 37.37%. Functional annotation based on the Kyoto encyclopedia of genes and genomes pathways revealed tens to hundreds of strain-specific proteins among different strains, and even between the strains showing high 16S rRNA gene sequence identity. Prediction analysis of carbohydrate metabolism revealed different capacities for metabolizing carbohydrate substrates among Erysipelotrichaceae strains. We identified that genes related to the GalNAc metabolism pathway were enriched in the genomes of all five isolates and 16 Erysipelotrichaceae strains downloaded from GenBank, suggesting the importance of GalNAc metabolism in Erysipelotrichaceae strains. Polysaccharide utilization loci (PUL) analysis revealed that the strains of Erysipelotrichaceae may have the ability to utilize plant polysaccharides.ConclusionsThe present study not only reports the successful isolation of novel Erysipelotrichaceae strains that enrich the cultured strains of Erysipelotrichaceae, but also provided the genome information of Erysipelotrichaceae strains for further studying the function roles of Erysipelotrichaceae in host phenotypes.

Highlights

  • Members of the Erysipelotrichaceae family have a high abundance in the intestinal tract of mammals, and have been reported to be associated with host metabolic disorders and inflammatory diseases

  • Morphological characterization and phylogenetic relationships of five Erysipelotrichaceae isolates To isolate novel members of Erysipelotrichaceae, we collected stool samples from 24 healthy pigs, and isolated Erysipelotrichaceae strains under anaerobic conditions using selective and non-selective media

  • We successfully isolated five strains of Erysipelotrichaceae, and all of them showed growth on Gifu anaerobic medium (GAM) or modified GAM (mGAM) medium. This result suggested that GAM and mGAM sufficiently supported the growth of certain members of Erysipelotrichaceae

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Summary

Introduction

Members of the Erysipelotrichaceae family have a high abundance in the intestinal tract of mammals, and have been reported to be associated with host metabolic disorders and inflammatory diseases. Only a few members of Erysipelotrichaceae have been isolated and cultured, and their main characteristics, genomic information and the functional capacity of carbohydrate metabolism remain unknown. Several studies have reported that the microbial community extensively impacts host health by influencing intestinal epithelial cell proliferation, local and systemic immunity, and metabolism. Studies on the functional capacity of the gut microbiota are urgently needed to elucidate how the microbiome interacts with the host and influences host health. The mechanism by which these uncultured bacterial species colonize and propagate in the gut, and their impact on host physiology is currently unknown. Obtaining a pure culture of these microbiota is essential to determine their roles in the gut microbiome

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