Abstract

Often physiological studies using mice from one vendor show different outcome when being reproduced using mice from another vendor. These divergent phenotypes between similar mouse strains from different vendors have been assigned to differences in the gut microbiome. During recent years, evidence has mounted that the gut viral community plays a key role in shaping the gut microbiome and may thus also influence mouse phenotype. However, to date inter-vendor variation in the murine gut virome has not been studied. Using a metavirome approach, combined with 16S rRNA gene sequencing, we here compare the composition of the viral and bacterial gut community of C57BL/6N mice from three different vendors exposed to either a chow-based low-fat diet or high-fat diet. Interestingly, both the bacterial and the viral component of the gut community differed significantly between vendors. The different diets also strongly influenced both the viral and bacterial gut community, but surprisingly the effect of vendor exceeded the effect of diet. In conclusion, the vendor effect is substantial not only on the gut bacterial community but also strongly influences viral community composition. Given the effect of GM on mice phenotype, this is essential to consider for increasing reproducibility of mouse studies.

Highlights

  • During the last decade, the gut microbiome (GM) and its role in host health and disease have emerged as a rapidly expanding area of research [1,2]

  • We investigate the impact of vendor and diet on the bacterial and viral community of C57BL/6N (B6) mice purchased from Taconic (TAC), Charles River (CR), and Janvier (JAN)

  • Similar mechanisms of active prophages harbored in the bacteria that initially colonized the new-born mice, at each vendor facility, could at least partly explain the strong effect of vendor on the microbial composition observed in our study

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Summary

Introduction

The gut microbiome (GM) and its role in host health and disease have emerged as a rapidly expanding area of research [1,2]. More in-depth studies are needed, phages are hypothesized to play an important role in shaping the bacterial GM component [3,10,11]. This has been further supported by Draper et al that applied fecal virome transplantation (FVT) to reshape the mouse gut microbiome after

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