4.7 Article

Intercontinental Gut Microbiome Variances in IBD

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231810868

Keywords

microbiome; IBD; geography

Funding

  1. European Union [812969]
  2. Instituto de Salud Carlos III/FEDER [PI17/00614, PI20/00130]
  3. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [812969] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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The study found that geographical location, disease activity status, and other environmental factors are important contributing factors to microbiota changes in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). CD patients from different countries may have similar microbial taxonomic profiles. Therefore, these factors should be considered in future IBD research to obtain globally valid and reproducible biomarkers.
The development of biomarkers for inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) diagnosis would be relevant in a generalized context. However, intercontinental investigation on these microbial biomarkers remains scarce. We examined taxonomic microbiome variations in IBD using published DNA shotgun metagenomic data. For this purpose, we used sequenced data from our previous Spanish Crohn's disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC) cohort, downloaded sequence data from a Chinese CD cohort, and downloaded taxonomic and functional profiling tables from a USA CD and UC cohort. At the global level, geographical location and disease phenotype were the main explanatory covariates of microbiome variations. In healthy controls (HC) and UC, geography turned out to be the most important factor, while disease intestinal location was the most important one in CD. Disease severity correlated with lower alpha-diversity in UC but not in CD. Across geography, alpha-diversity was significantly different independently of health status, except for CD. Despite recruitment from different countries and with different disease severity scores, CD patients may harbor a very similar microbial taxonomic profile. Our study pointed out that geographic location, disease activity status, and other environmental factors are important contributing factors in microbiota changes in IBD. We therefore strongly recommend taking these factors into consideration for future IBD studies to obtain globally valid and reproducible biomarkers.

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