In recent years, many spore-forming commensal Clostridia found in the gut have been discovered to promote host physiology, immune development, and protection against infections. We provide a detailed protocol for rapid enrichment of spore-forming bacteria from murine intestine. Briefly, contents from the intestinal cecum are collected aerobically, diluted and finally treated with chloroform to enrich for Clostridia spores.
Chloroform kills vegetative bacterial cells but not spores and thus is a useful treatment for enriching Clostridia, the dominant spore-forming group in the mammalian intestine. Experimental procedures for chloroform treatment of mouse feces exist (Momose et al., 2009; Yano et al., 2015). However, they utilize specialized equipment including an anaerobic chamber. We realized that several brief exposures to oxygen occur during experimental manipulation of intestinal contents in preparation for and after chloroform treatment. Therefore, we reasoned the sufficient recover of murine spore-forming bacteria could be obtained without the use of an anaerobic chamber. Since spore-forming Clostridia are a dominant species in the mammalian intestine, this protocol could potentially be used for isolation of spores from the intestines of other mammalian organisms, including larger rodents, primates, and humans.
Materials and Reagents
Sterile 1.5 ml microcentrifuge tubes (Eppendorf, catalog number: 022363204 )
15 ml tubes
Female (male mice may be used if necessary) C57BL/6 mice aged 8-12 weeks (THE JACKSON LABORATORIES)
Velazquez, E. M., Rivera-Chávez, F. and Bäumler, A. J. (2017). Spore Preparation Protocol for Enrichment of Clostridia from Murine Intestine. Bio-protocol 7(10): e2296. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.2296.