Fungal microbiota dysbiosis in IBD

Harry Sokol(Inserm), Valentin Leducq(Inserm), Hugues Aschard(Harvard University), Hang‐Phuong Pham(Sorbonne Université), Sarah Jégou(Inserm), Cécilia Landman(Sorbonne Université), David Cohen(Inserm), Giuseppina Liguori(Universidad de Alcalá), Anne Bourrier(Sorbonne Université), Isabelle Nion–Larmurier(Sorbonne Université), Jacques Cosnes(Sorbonne Université), Philippe Seksik(Sorbonne Université), Philippe Langella(AgroParisTech), David Skurnik(Brigham and Women's Hospital), Mathias L. Richard(AgroParisTech), Laurent Beaugerie(Sorbonne Université)
Gut
February 3, 2016
Cited by 1,317Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The bacterial intestinal microbiota plays major roles in human physiology and IBDs. Although some data suggest a role of the fungal microbiota in IBD pathogenesis, the available data are scarce. The aim of our study was to characterise the faecal fungal microbiota in patients with IBD. DESIGN: Bacterial and fungal composition of the faecal microbiota of 235 patients with IBD and 38 healthy subjects (HS) was determined using 16S and ITS2 sequencing, respectively. The obtained sequences were analysed using the Qiime pipeline to assess composition and diversity. Bacterial and fungal taxa associated with clinical parameters were identified using multivariate association with linear models. Correlation between bacterial and fungal microbiota was investigated using Spearman's test and distance correlation. RESULTS: compared with HS. We also identified disease-specific alterations in diversity, indicating that a Crohn's disease-specific gut environment may favour fungi at the expense of bacteria. The concomitant analysis of bacterial and fungal microbiota showed a dense and homogenous correlation network in HS but a dramatically unbalanced network in IBD, suggesting the existence of disease-specific inter-kingdom alterations. CONCLUSIONS: Besides bacterial dysbiosis, our study identifies a distinct fungal microbiota dysbiosis in IBD characterised by alterations in biodiversity and composition. Moreover, we unravel here disease-specific inter-kingdom network alterations in IBD, suggesting that, beyond bacteria, fungi might also play a role in IBD pathogenesis.


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