Abstract

Dietary fibers are major substrates for maintaining and shaping gut microbiota, but the structural specificity of these fibers for the diversity, structure and function of gut microbiota are poorly understood. Here, we employed an in vitro sequential batch fecal culture approach to address two ecological questions: (i) whether the chemical complexity of a carbohydrate influences its ability to maintain microbial diversity against high dilution pressure (ii) whether substrate structuring or obligate microbe-microbe metabolic interactions (e.g. exchange of amino acids or vitamins) exert more influence on maintained diversity. Sorghum arabinoxylan (SAX, a complex polysaccharide), inulin (a low-complexity oligosaccharide) and their corresponding monosaccharide controls were selected as model carbohydrates. Our results demonstrate that complex carbohydrates stably sustain diverse microbial consortia. Furthermore, other metabolic interactions were less influential in structuring microbial consortia consuming SAX than inulin. Finally, very similar final consortia were enriched on SAX from the same individual's fecal microbiota one month later, suggesting that polysaccharide structure is more influential than stochastic alterations in microbiome composition in governing the outcomes of sequential batch cultivation experiments. These data suggest that carbohydrate structural complexity affords independent niches that structure fermenting microbial consortia, whereas other metabolic interactions govern the composition of communities fermenting simpler carbohydrates.

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