DOI

  • D. A. Sela
  • J. Chapman
  • A. Adeuya
  • J. H. Kim
  • F. Chen
  • T. R. Whitehead
  • A. Lapidus
  • D. S. Rokhsar
  • C. B. Lebrilla
  • J. B. German
  • N. P. Price
  • P. M. Richardson
  • D. A. Mills

Following birth, the breast-fed infant gastrointestinal tract is rapidly colonized by a microbial consortium often dominated by bifidobacteria. Accordingly, the complete genome sequence of Bifidobacterium longum subsp. infantis ATCC15697 reflects a competitive nutrient-utilization strategy targeting milk-borne molecules which lack a nutritive value to the neonate. Several chromosomal loci reflect potential adaptation to the infant host including a 43 kbp cluster encoding catabolic genes, extracellular solute binding proteins and permeases predicted to be active on milk oligosaccharides. An examination of in vivo metabolism has detected the hallmarks of milk oligosaccharide utilization via the central fermentative pathway using metabolomic and proteomic approaches. Finally, conservation of gene clusters in multiple isolates corroborates the genomic mechanism underlying milk utilization for this infant-associated phylotype.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)18964-18969
Number of pages6
JournalProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume105
Issue number48
DOIs
StatePublished - 2 Dec 2008

    Research areas

  • Carbohydrate metabolism, Co-evolution, Genomics, Human milk oligosaccharides

    Scopus subject areas

  • General

ID: 90034239