肠道中与疾病相关的微生物群特征物种。

IF 2.2 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
PNAS nexus Pub Date : 2024-08-21 eCollection Date: 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgae352
Junhui Li, Paul W O'Toole
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引用次数: 0

摘要

越来越多的证据表明,人类肠道微生物群在维持健康方面发挥着作用,而肠道微生物群的改变(有时称为菌群失调)与许多非传染性疾病的风险有关。然而,肠道和身体其他部位与疾病相关的细菌的动态变化仍不清楚。如果微生物群的改变被证明是特定疾病的致病因素,就有可能进行治疗干预。此外,微生物特征类群已被确定用于诊断结肠癌等疾病。我们从对结肠直肠癌、溃疡性结肠炎、克罗恩病、肠易激综合征、胰腺癌和 COVID-19 感染等多种疾病的 10 项元分析中,以物种级分辨率(特征物种)确定了 163 个疾病富集和 98 个疾病贫乏肠道微生物组特征类群。在所研究的疾病中,至少有一半的疾病富集了 8 个特征物种,而有 9 个特征物种被耗尽。与疾病中被耗尽的特征物种相比,疾病中富集的特征物种被鉴定为肠道外(主要是口腔)居民的比例明显更高,文献中的菌血症病例中也有报道,而且是耐气厌氧菌。这些发现凸显了口腔微生物、菌血症分离物和耐气厌氧菌可能参与了与疾病相关的肠道微生物组改变,它们对患者护理和疾病管理具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disease-associated microbiome signature species in the gut.

There is an accumulation of evidence that the human gut microbiota plays a role in maintaining health, and that an altered gut microbiota (sometimes called dysbiosis) associates with risk for many noncommunicable diseases. However, the dynamics of disease-linked bacteria in the gut and other body sites remain unclear. If microbiome alterations prove causative in particular diseases, therapeutic intervention may be possible. Furthermore, microbial signature taxa have been established for the diagnosis of some diseases like colon cancer. We identified 163 disease-enriched and 98 disease-depleted gut microbiome signature taxa at species-level resolution (signature species) from 10 meta-analyses of multiple diseases such as colorectal cancer, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, irritable bowel syndrome, pancreatic cancer, and COVID-19 infection. Eight signature species were enriched and nine were depleted across at least half of the diseases studied. Compared with signature species depleted in diseases, a significantly higher proportion of disease-enriched signature species were identified as extra-intestinal (primarily oral) inhabitants, had been reported in bacteremia cases from the literature, and were aerotolerant anaerobes. These findings highlight the potential involvement of oral microbes, bacteremia isolates, and aerotolerant anaerobes in disease-associated gut microbiome alterations, and they have implications for patient care and disease management.

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