Abstract

pH and fermentable substrates impose selective pressures on gut microbial communities and their metabolisms. We evaluated the relative contributions of pH, alkalinity, and substrate on microbial community structure, metabolism, and functional interactions using triplicate batch cultures started from fecal slurry and incubated with an initial pH of 6.0, 6.5, or 6.9 and 10mM glucose, fructose, or cellobiose as the carbon substrate. We analyzed 16S rRNA gene sequences and fermentation products. Microbial diversity was driven by both pH and substrate type. Due to insufficient alkalinity, a drop in pH from 6.0 to ~4.5 clustered pH 6.0 cultures together and distant from pH 6.5 and 6.9 cultures, which experienced only small pH drops. Cellobiose yielded more acidity than alkalinity due to the amount of fermentable carbon, which moved cellobiose pH 6.5 cultures away from other pH 6.5 cultures. The impact of pH on microbial community structure was reflected by fermentative metabolism. Lactate accumulation occurred in pH 6.0 cultures, whereas propionate and acetate accumulations were observed in pH 6.5 and 6.9 cultures and independently from the type of substrate provided. Finally, pH had an impact on the interactions between lactate-producing and -consuming communities. Lactate-producing Streptococcus dominated pH 6.0 cultures, and acetate- and propionate-producing Veillonella, Bacteroides, and Escherichia dominated the cultures started at pH6.5 and 6.9. Acid inhibition on lactate-consuming species led to lactate accumulation. Our results provide insights into pH-derived changes in fermenting microbiota and metabolisms in the human gut. IMPORTANCE The human gut is a dynamic environment in which microorganisms consistently interact with the host via their metabolic products. Some of the most important microbial metabolic products are fermentation products such as short-chain fatty acids. Production of these fermentation products and the prevalence of fermenting microbiota depend on pH, alkalinity, and available dietary sugars, but details about their metabolic interactions are unknown. Here, we show that, for in vitro conditions, pH was the strongest driver of microbial community structure and function and microbial and metabolic interactions among pH-sensitive fermentative species. The balance between bicarbonate alkalinity and formation of fatty acids by fermentation determined the pH, which controlled microbial community structure. Our results underscore the influence of pH balance on microbial function in diverse microbial ecosystems such as the human gut.

Highlights

  • ABSTRACT pH and fermentable substrates impose selective pressures on gut microbial communities and their metabolisms

  • For fructose and cellobiose cultures, the abundance-based coverage estimator (ACE) index showed that lower starting pH and alkalinity led to lower microbial richness. This trend was accentuated for cellobiose, a disaccharide composed of two glucose molecules, except when buffering was strongest at pH 6.9

  • Our results show that microbiota exposed to in vitro-relevant conditions responded to pH drops caused by limitations in the ambient buffering capacity, indicating the importance of alkalinity in stabilizing the human gut microbiota

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Summary

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

Mixed community structure depends more on pH than on carbon type. Unweighted UniFrac analysis, which provides information on changes in taxa that are not abundant, did not yield clusters based on pH or carbon source. Weighted UniFrac analysis, which relies on the abundance of phylotypes in addition to their presence or absence, provides information regarding the most abundant taxa. Since we had enrichment cultures from the same inoculum, msphere.asm.org 3

Total acids produceda
Substrate Products
MATERIALS AND METHODS
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