4.4 Article

Ectopic gut colonization: a metagenomic study of the oral and gut microbiome in Crohn's disease

期刊

GUT PATHOGENS
卷 13, 期 1, 页码 -

出版社

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13099-021-00409-5

关键词

Crohn’ s disease; Gastrointestinal microbiome; Oral microbiome; Metagenomics

资金

  1. National University of Singapore Start-up grant (Exploring the Oral Microbiome in Crohn's Disease)

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This study characterized the gut and oral microbiome of Asian Crohn's disease (CD) patients using whole genome shotgun sequencing, revealing the enrichment of oral bacteria such as Streptococcus salivarius in the gut microbiome of CD patients. Additionally, distinct differences in gut microbial species abundance were observed between CD patients and healthy controls, with potential associations to disease activity. Ectopic gut colonization by oral bacteria was evidenced, especially during the active phase of CD, highlighting geographical/ethnic differences compared to subjects of European descent. Moreover, variations in microbial pathways provide potential targets for microbiome modification.
Background This study aims to characterize, the gut and oral microbiome in Asian subjects with Crohn's disease (CD) using whole genome shotgun sequencing, thereby allowing for strain-level comparison. Methods A case-control study with age, sex and ethnicity matched healthy controls was conducted. CD subjects were limited to well-controlled patients without oral manifestations. Fecal and saliva samples were collected for characterization of gut and oral microbiome respectively. Microbial DNA were extracted, libraries prepared and sequenced reads profiled. Taxonomic diversity, taxonomic association, strain typing and microbial gene pathway analyses were conducted. Results The study recruited 25 subjects with CD and 25 healthy controls. The oral microbe Streptococcus salivarius was found to be enriched and of concordant strains in the gut and oral microbiome of Crohn's disease subjects. This was more likely in CD subjects with higher Crohn's Disease Activity Index (184.3 +/- 2.9 vs 67.1 +/- 82.5, p = 0.012) and active disease status (Diarrhoea/abdominal pain/blood-in-stool/fever and fatigue) (p = 0.016). Gut species found to be significantly depleted in CD compared to control (Relative abundance: Median[Range]) include: Faecalibacterium prausnitzii (0.03[0.00-4.56] vs 13.69[5.32-18.71], p = 0.010), Roseburia inulinivorans (0.00[0.00-0.03] vs 0.21[0.01-0.53], p = 0.010) and Alistipes senegalensis (0.00[0.00-0.00] vs 0.00[0.00-0.02], p = 0.029). While Clostridium nexile (0.00[0.00-0.12] vs 0.00[0.00-0.00], p = 0.038) and Ruminococcus gnavus (0.43[0.02-0.33] vs 0.00[0.00-0.13], p = 0.043) were found to be enriched. C. nexile enrichment was not found in CD subjects of European descent. Microbial arginine (Linear-discriminant-analysis: 3.162, p = 0.001) and isoprene (Linear-discriminant-analysis: 3.058, p < 0.001) pathways were found at a higher relative abundance level in gut microbiome of Crohn's disease. Conclusions There was evidence of ectopic gut colonization by oral bacteria, especially during the active phase of CD. Previously studied gut microbial differences were detected, in addition to novel associations which could have resulted from geographical/ethnic differences to subjects of European descent. Differences in microbial pathways provide possible targets for microbiome modification.

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