健康和疾病中的肠道微生物多样性:健康印度人、结肠癌和炎症性肠病患者的经验。

Microbial Ecology in Health and Disease Pub Date : 2017-05-19 eCollection Date: 2017-01-01 DOI:10.1080/16512235.2017.1322447
V Deepak Bamola, Arnab Ghosh, Raj Kishor Kapardar, Banwari Lal, Simrita Cheema, Priyangshu Sarma, Rama Chaudhry
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:肠道微生物群通过与肠道粘膜的复杂相互作用,在结肠癌和炎症性肠病(IBD)的发病机制中发挥着关键作用。疾病状况和饮食习惯都会影响肠道微生物的多样性。研究目的本研究旨在评估健康受试者以及结肠癌和 IBD 患者的肠道微生物概况。健康受试者包括 "印度素食者/乳素食者 "和 "印度荤素食者",前者食用植物、奶及奶制品、某些肉类和鱼类,以及某些鸟类和鱼类的蛋。印度素食者 "不同于 "纯素食者",后者不吃任何完全或部分来自动物的食物,包括奶制品。设计:从健康的印度素食者/乳素食者和非素食者以及结肠癌和肠道疾病患者身上采集粪便样本。从每个样本中创建细菌 16S 核糖体 DNA (rDNA) 克隆文库。对每组样本中的一个代表性样本进行克隆测序。从每个样本中随机抽取约 500 个白色菌落,对 100 个菌落进行扩增 rDNA 限制分析后测序。结果健康素食者的主要菌门类是真菌门(34%),其次是类杆菌门(15%)。健康荤食者的这一比例则相反(类杆菌属占 84%,固着菌属占 4%;比例为 21:1)。结肠癌和肠道疾病患者的类杆菌(55%)高于固缩菌(分别为 26% 和 12%),但类杆菌与固缩菌的比例(分别为 3.8:1 和 2.4:1)却低于健康的非素食者。在肠道疾病患者和结肠患者中,分别有 23% 和 5% 的人检测到了 Verrucomicrobiota 和放线菌。结论核糖体数据库项目对本研究人群肠道菌群的分析显示出显著的差异,不同的饮食习惯和疾病状况导致了独特的多样性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Gut microbial diversity in health and disease: experience of healthy Indian subjects, and colon carcinoma and inflammatory bowel disease patients.

Gut microbial diversity in health and disease: experience of healthy Indian subjects, and colon carcinoma and inflammatory bowel disease patients.

Gut microbial diversity in health and disease: experience of healthy Indian subjects, and colon carcinoma and inflammatory bowel disease patients.

Background: The intestinal microbiota, through complex interactions with the gut mucosa, play a key role in the pathogenesis of colon carcinoma and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). The disease condition and dietary habits both influence gut microbial diversity. Objective: The aim of this study was to assess the gut microbial profile of healthy subjects and patients with colon carcinoma and IBD. Healthy subjects included 'Indian vegetarians/lactovegetarians', who eat plant produce, milk and milk products, and 'Indian non-vegetarians', who eat plant produce, milk and milk products, certain meats and fish, and the eggs of certain birds and fish. 'Indian vegetarians' are different from 'vegans', who do not eat any foods derived wholly or partly from animals, including milk products. Design: Stool samples were collected from healthy Indian vegetarians/lactovegetarians and non-vegetarians, and colon cancer and IBD patients. Clonal libraries of 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) of bacteria were created from each sample. Clones were sequenced from one representative sample of each group. Approximately 500 white colonies were picked at random from each sample and 100 colonies were sequenced after amplified rDNA restriction analysis. Results: The dominant phylum from the healthy vegetarian was Firmicutes (34%), followed by Bacteroidetes (15%). The balance was reversed in the healthy non-vegetarian (Bacteroidetes 84%, Firmicutes 4%; ratio 21:1). The colon cancer and IBD patients had higher percentages of Bacteroidetes (55% in both) than Firmicutes (26% and 12%, respectively) but lower Bacteroidetes:Firmicutes ratios (3.8:1 and 2.4:1, respectively) than the healthy non-vegetarian. Bacterial phyla of Verrucomicrobiota and Actinobacteria were detected in 23% and 5% of IBD and colon patients, respectively. Conclusions: Ribosomal Database Project profiling of gut flora in this study population showed remarkable differences, with unique diversity attributed to different diets and disease conditions.

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