- Spiga, Luisella;
- Winter, Maria G;
- de Carvalho, Tatiane Furtado;
- Zhu, Wenhan;
- Hughes, Elizabeth R;
- Gillis, Caroline C;
- Behrendt, Cassie L;
- Kim, Jiwoong;
- Chessa, Daniela;
- Andrews-Polymenis, Helene L;
- Beiting, Daniel P;
- Santos, Renato L;
- Hooper, Lora V;
- Winter, Sebastian E
The mucosal inflammatory response induced by Salmonella serovar Typhimurium creates a favorable niche for this gut pathogen. Conventional wisdom holds that S. Typhimurium undergoes an incomplete tricarboxylic acid (TCA) cycle in the anaerobic mammalian gut. One change during S. Typhimurium-induced inflammation is the production of oxidized compounds by infiltrating neutrophils. We show that inflammation-derived electron acceptors induce a complete, oxidative TCA cycle in S. Typhimurium, allowing the bacteria to compete with the microbiota for colonization. A complete TCA cycle facilitates utilization of the microbiota-derived fermentation product succinate as a carbon source. S. Typhimurium succinate utilization genes contribute to efficient colonization in conventionally raised mice, but provide no growth advantage in germ-free mice. Mono-association of gnotobiotic mice with Bacteroides, a major succinate producer, restores succinate utilization in S. Typhimurium. Thus, oxidative central metabolism enables S. Typhimurium to utilize a variety of carbon sources, including microbiota-derived succinate.