Tejaswini Baral, Shaik Mohammad Abdul Fayaz, Mohan K Manu, Chandrashekar Udyavara Kudru, Jitendra Singh, Chiranjay Mukhopadhyay, Mahadev Rao, Kavitha Saravu, Sonal Sekhar Miraj
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Emerging evidence suggests the link between pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB) and gut microbiota dysbiosis. This is the first study from the southern Indian population that characterized the gut microbiota of PTB patients using 16 S amplicon sequencing. The analysis revealed a significant reduction in gut microbial diversity among PTB patients, with particularly lower alpha diversity (Chao1 index, p ≤ 0.0001) than healthy controls (HC). This was further depleted during antitubercular therapy (ATT). Beta diversity indicated distinct clustering in all the groups (p < 0.05). Subgroup analyses showed that supplementation of probiotics with ATT improved microbial richness and diversity. However, broader shifts in composition were not observed. At the genus level, specific taxa were upregulated or downregulated in PTB patients compared to HC. Functional analysis showed a depletion in biosynthesis pathways in PTB patients. Short-term probiotic supplementation had a partial effect on microbial recovery but did not fully restore gut microbial diversity. These findings highlight persistent dysbiosis in PTB patients, even after ATT. Large-scale studies are needed to evaluate the role of microbiome-targeted therapies to address this dysbiosis.
Gut PathogensGASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY-MICROBIOLOGY
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
2.40%
发文量
43
期刊介绍:
Gut Pathogens is a fast publishing, inclusive and prominent international journal which recognizes the need for a publishing platform uniquely tailored to reflect the full breadth of research in the biology and medicine of pathogens, commensals and functional microbiota of the gut. The journal publishes basic, clinical and cutting-edge research on all aspects of the above mentioned organisms including probiotic bacteria and yeasts and their products. The scope also covers the related ecology, molecular genetics, physiology and epidemiology of these microbes. The journal actively invites timely reports on the novel aspects of genomics, metagenomics, microbiota profiling and systems biology.
Gut Pathogens will also consider, at the discretion of the editors, descriptive studies identifying a new genome sequence of a gut microbe or a series of related microbes (such as those obtained from new hosts, niches, settings, outbreaks and epidemics) and those obtained from single or multiple hosts at one or different time points (chronological evolution).