In search for interplay between stool microRNAs, microbiota and short chain fatty acids in Crohn's disease - a preliminary study

Inflammatory bowel diseases are classic polygenic disorders, with genetic loads that reflect immunopathological processes in response to the intestinal microbiota. Herein we performed the multiomics analysis by combining the large scale surveys of gut bacterial community, stool microRNA (miRNA) and...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC gastroenterology 2020-09, Vol.20 (1), p.307-307, Article 307
Hauptverfasser: Ambrozkiewicz, Filip, Karczmarski, Jakub, Kulecka, Maria, Paziewska, Agnieszka, Niemira, Magdalena, Zeber-Lubecka, Natalia, Zagorowicz, Edyta, Kretowski, Adam, Ostrowski, Jerzy
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Inflammatory bowel diseases are classic polygenic disorders, with genetic loads that reflect immunopathological processes in response to the intestinal microbiota. Herein we performed the multiomics analysis by combining the large scale surveys of gut bacterial community, stool microRNA (miRNA) and short chain fatty acid (SCFA) signatures to correlate their association with the activity of Crohn's disease (CD). DNA, miRNA, and metabolites were extracted from stool samples of 15 CD patients, eight with active disease and seven in remission, and nine healthy individuals. Microbial, miRNA and SCFA profiles were assessed using datasets from 16S rRNA sequencing, Nanostring miRNA and GC-MS targeted analysis, respectively. Pairwise comparisons showed that 9 and 23 taxa differed between controls and CD patients with active and inactive disease, respectively. Six taxa were common to both comparisons, whereas four taxa differed in CD patients. α-Diversity was lower in both CD groups than in controls. The levels of 13 miRNAs differed (p-value  1.5) in CD patients and controls before FDR correction and 4 after. Of six SCFAs, the levels of two differed significantly (p-value  1.5) in CD patients and controls, and the levels of four differed in patients with active and inactive CD. PLS-DA revealed models with smallest error rate for controls in bacterial component and inactive disease in metabolites. A complex interrelationship may exist between gut dysbiosis, miRNA profiling and SCFA level in response to intestinal inflammation.
ISSN:1471-230X
1471-230X
DOI:10.1186/s12876-020-01444-3