4.8 Article

The human gut microbiome in early-onset type 1 diabetes from the TEDDY study

Journal

NATURE
Volume 562, Issue 7728, Pages 589-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-018-0620-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) [U01 DK63829, U01 DK63861, U01 DK63821, U01 DK63865, U01 DK63863, U01 DK63836, U01 DK63790, UC4 DK63829, UC4 DK63861, UC4 DK63821, UC4 DK63865, UC4 DK63863, UC4 DK63836, UC4 DK95300, UC4 DK100238, UC4 DK106955, UC4 DK112243, UC4 DK117483, HHSN267200700014C]
  2. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID)
  3. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD)
  4. National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences (NIEHS)
  5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)
  6. JDRF [3-SRA-2016-141-Q-R, 2-SRA-2016-247-S-B, 2-SRA-2018-548-S-B]
  7. NIH/NCATS Clinical and Translational Science Awards [UL1 TR000064, UL1 TR001082]
  8. NIDDK [U54DE023798, R24DK110499]

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Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease that targets pancreatic islet beta cells and incorporates genetic and environmental factors(1), including complex genetic elements(2), patient exposures(3) and the gut microbiome(4). Viral infections(5) and broader gut dysbioses(6) have been identified as potential causes or contributing factors; however, human studies have not yet identified microbial compositional or functional triggers that are predictive of islet autoimmunity or T1D. Here we analyse 10,913 metagenomes in stool samples from 783 mostly white, non-Hispanic children. The samples were collected monthly from three months of age until the clinical end point (islet autoimmunity or T1D) in the The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) study, to characterize the natural history of the early gut microbiome in connection to islet autoimmunity, T1D diagnosis, and other common early life events such as antibiotic treatments and probiotics. The microbiomes of control children contained more genes that were related to fermentation and the biosynthesis of short-chain fatty acids, but these were not consistently associated with particular taxa across geographically diverse clinical centres, suggesting that microbial factors associated with T1D are taxonomically diffuse but functionally more coherent. When we investigated the broader establishment and development of the infant microbiome, both taxonomic and functional profiles were dynamic and highly individualized, and dominated in the first year of life by one of three largely exclusive Bifidobacterium species (B. bifidum, B. breve or B. longum) or by the phylum Proteobacteria. In particular, the strain-specific carriage of genes for the utilization of human milk oligosaccharide within a subset of B. longum was present specifically in breast-fed infants. These analyses of TEDDY gut metagenomes provide, to our knowledge, the largest and most detailed longitudinal functional profile of the developing gut microbiome in relation to islet autoimmunity, T1D and other early childhood events. Together with existing evidence from human cohorts(7,8) and a T1D mouse model(9), these data support the protective effects of short-chain fatty acids in early-onset human T1D.

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