Journal of Clinical Medicine (Apr 2021)

Bacteroidetes Species Are Correlated with Disease Activity in Ulcerative Colitis

  • Kei Nomura,
  • Dai Ishikawa,
  • Koki Okahara,
  • Shoko Ito,
  • Keiichi Haga,
  • Masahito Takahashi,
  • Atsushi Arakawa,
  • Tomoyoshi Shibuya,
  • Taro Osada,
  • Kyoko Kuwahara-Arai,
  • Teruo Kirikae,
  • Akihito Nagahara

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm10081749
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 8
p. 1749

Abstract

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Fecal microbiota transplantation following triple-antibiotic therapy (amoxicillin/fosfomycin/metronidazole) improves dysbiosis caused by reduced Bacteroidetes diversity in patients with ulcerative colitis (UC). We investigated the correlation between Bacteroidetes species abundance and UC activity. Fecal samples from 34 healthy controls and 52 patients with active UC (Lichtiger’s clinical activity index ≥5 or Mayo endoscopic subscore ≥1) were subjected to next-generation sequencing with HSP60 as a target in bacterial metagenome analysis. A multiplex gene expression assay using colonoscopy-harvested mucosal tissues determined the involvement of Bacteroidetes species in the mucosal immune response. In patients with UC, six Bacteroides species exhibited significantly lower relative abundance, and twelve Bacteroidetes species were found significantly correlated with at least one metric of disease activity. The abundance of five Bacteroidetes species (Alistipes putredinis, Bacteroides stercoris, Bacteroides uniformis, Bacteroides rodentium, and Parabacteroides merdae) was correlated with three metrics, and their cumulative relative abundance was strongly correlated with the sum of Mayo endoscopic subscore (R = −0.71, p = 2 × 10−9). Five genes (TARP, C10ORF54, ITGAE, TNFSF9, and LCN2) associated with UC pathogenesis were expressed by the 12 key species. The loss of key species may exacerbate UC activity, serving as potential biomarkers.

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