The species Bifidobacterium longum currently comprises four subspecies: B. longum subsp. longum, B. longum subsp. infantis, B. longum subsp. suis and B. longum subsp. suillum. Recently, several studies on B. longum suggested the presence of a separate clade containing four strains isolated from infants and one from rhesus macaque. These strains shared a phylogenetic similarity to B. longum subsp. suis DSM 20210T and B. longum subsp. suillum JCM1995T [average nucleotide identity (ANI) of 98.1%) while showed an ANI of 96.5% with both B. longum subsp. infantis and B. longum subsp. longum. The current work describes five novel additional B. longum strains isolated from Bangladeshi weaning infants and demonstrates their common phylogenetic origin with those of the previously proposed separated clade. Based on polyphasic taxonomic approach comprising loci multilocus sequence analysis and whole genome multilocus sequence typing, all ten examined strains have been confirmed as a distinct lineage within the species B. longum with B. longum subsp. suis and B. longum subsp. suillum as closest subspecies. Interestingly, these strains are present in weaning infants and primates as opposed to their closest relatives which have been typically isolated from pig and calves. These strains, similarly to B. longum subsp. infantis, show a common capacity to metabolize the human milk oligosaccharide 3-fucosyllactose. Moreover, they harbour a riboflavin synthesis operon, which differentiate them from their closest subspecies, B. longum subsp. suis and B. longum subsp. suillum. Based on the consistent results from genotypical, ecological and phenotypical analyses, a novel subspecies with the name Bifidobacterium longum subsp. iuvenis, with type strain NCC 5000T (=LMG 32752T=CCOS 2034T), is proposed.
CITATION STYLE
Modesto, M., Ngom-Bru, C., Scarafile, D., Bruttin, A., Pruvost, S., Sarker, S. A., … Duboux, S. (2023). Bifidobacterium longum subsp. iuvenis subsp. nov., a novel subspecies isolated from the faeces of weaning infants. International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology, 73(10). https://doi.org/10.1099/ijsem.0.006013
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