4.8 Article

A metagenome-wide association study of gut microbiota in type 2 diabetes

Journal

NATURE
Volume 490, Issue 7418, Pages 55-60

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature11450

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2012AA02A201]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30890032, 30725008, 30811130531, 31161130357]
  3. Shenzhen Municipal Government of China [ZYC200903240080A, BGI20100001, CXB201108250096A, CXB201108250098A]
  4. Danish Strategic Research Council [2106-07-0021]
  5. Danish Natural Science Research Council
  6. Solexa project [272-07-0196]
  7. European Commission [HEALTH-F4-2007-201052]
  8. Novo Nordisk Foundation
  9. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2012AA02A201]
  10. National Natural Science Foundation of China [30890032, 30725008, 30811130531, 31161130357]
  11. Shenzhen Municipal Government of China [ZYC200903240080A, BGI20100001, CXB201108250096A, CXB201108250098A]
  12. Danish Strategic Research Council [2106-07-0021]
  13. Danish Natural Science Research Council
  14. Solexa project [272-07-0196]
  15. European Commission [HEALTH-F4-2007-201052]
  16. Novo Nordisk Foundation

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Assessment and characterization of gut microbiota has become a major research area in human disease, including type 2 diabetes, the most prevalent endocrine disease worldwide. To carry out analysis on gut microbial content in patients with type 2 diabetes, we developed a protocol for a metagenome-wide association study (MGWAS) and undertook a two-stage MGWAS based on deep shotgun sequencing of the gut microbial DNA from 345 Chinese individuals. We identified and validated approximately 60,000 type-2-diabetes-associated markers and established the concept of a metagenomic linkage group, enabling taxonomic species-level analyses. MGWAS analysis showed that patients with type 2 diabetes were characterized by a moderate degree of gut microbial dysbiosis, a decrease in the abundance of some universal butyrate-producing bacteria and an increase in various opportunistic pathogens, as well as an enrichment of other microbial functions conferring sulphate reduction and oxidative stress resistance. An analysis of 23 additional individuals demonstrated that these gut microbial markers might be useful for classifying type 2 diabetes.

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