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1.
Microbiome ; 9(1): 139, 2021 06 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34127058

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Bariatric surgery, used to achieve effective weight loss in individuals with severe obesity, modifies the gut microbiota and systemic metabolism in both humans and animal models. The aim of the current study was to understand better the metabolic functions of the altered gut microbiome by conducting deep phenotyping of bariatric surgery patients and bacterial culturing to investigate causality of the metabolic observations. METHODS: Three bariatric cohorts (n = 84, n = 14 and n = 9) with patients who had undergone Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB), sleeve gastrectomy (SG) or laparoscopic gastric banding (LGB), respectively, were enrolled. Metabolic and 16S rRNA bacterial profiles were compared between pre- and post-surgery. Faeces from RYGB patients and bacterial isolates were cultured to experimentally associate the observed metabolic changes in biofluids with the altered gut microbiome. RESULTS: Compared to SG and LGB, RYGB induced the greatest weight loss and most profound metabolic and bacterial changes. RYGB patients showed increased aromatic amino acids-based host-bacterial co-metabolism, resulting in increased urinary excretion of 4-hydroxyphenylacetate, phenylacetylglutamine, 4-cresyl sulphate and indoxyl sulphate, and increased faecal excretion of tyramine and phenylacetate. Bacterial degradation of choline was increased as evidenced by altered urinary trimethylamine-N-oxide and dimethylamine excretion and faecal concentrations of dimethylamine. RYGB patients' bacteria had a greater capacity to produce tyramine from tyrosine, phenylalanine to phenylacetate and tryptophan to indole and tryptamine, compared to the microbiota from non-surgery, normal weight individuals. 3-Hydroxydicarboxylic acid metabolism and urinary excretion of primary bile acids, serum BCAAs and dimethyl sulfone were also perturbed following bariatric surgery. CONCLUSION: Altered bacterial composition and metabolism contribute to metabolic observations in biofluids of patients following RYGB surgery. The impact of these changes on the functional clinical outcomes requires further investigation. Video abstract.


Subject(s)
Gastric Bypass , Obesity, Morbid , Animals , Bacteria/genetics , Humans , Obesity, Morbid/surgery , Phenotype , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics
2.
Science ; 352(6285): 560-4, 2016 Apr 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27126039

ABSTRACT

Fecal microbiome variation in the average, healthy population has remained under-investigated. Here, we analyzed two independent, extensively phenotyped cohorts: the Belgian Flemish Gut Flora Project (FGFP; discovery cohort; N = 1106) and the Dutch LifeLines-DEEP study (LLDeep; replication; N = 1135). Integration with global data sets (N combined = 3948) revealed a 14-genera core microbiota, but the 664 identified genera still underexplore total gut diversity. Sixty-nine clinical and questionnaire-based covariates were found associated to microbiota compositional variation with a 92% replication rate. Stool consistency showed the largest effect size, whereas medication explained largest total variance and interacted with other covariate-microbiota associations. Early-life events such as birth mode were not reflected in adult microbiota composition. Finally, we found that proposed disease marker genera associated to host covariates, urging inclusion of the latter in study design.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/classification , Gastrointestinal Microbiome , Bacteria/genetics , Bacteria/isolation & purification , Belgium , Cohort Studies , Drug Interactions , Feces/microbiology , Humans
3.
Am J Respir Crit Care Med ; 188(10): 1224-31, 2013 Nov 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23992479

ABSTRACT

RATIONALE: Rhinovirus infection is followed by significantly increased frequencies of positive, potentially pathogenic sputum cultures in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). However, it remains unclear whether these represent de novo infections or an increased load of organisms from the complex microbial communities (microbiome) in the lower airways. OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effect of rhinovirus infection on the airway bacterial microbiome. METHODS: Subjects with COPD (n = 14) and healthy control subjects with normal lung function (n = 17) were infected with rhinovirus. Induced sputum was collected at baseline before rhinovirus inoculation and again on Days 5, 15, and 42 after rhinovirus infection and DNA was extracted. The V3-V5 region of the bacterial 16S ribosomal RNA gene was amplified and pyrosequenced, resulting in 370,849 high-quality reads from 112 of the possible 124 time points. MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: At 15 days after rhinovirus infection, there was a sixfold increase in 16S copy number (P = 0.007) and a 16% rise in numbers of proteobacterial sequences, most notably in potentially pathogenic Haemophilus influenzae (P = 2.7 × 10(-20)), from a preexisting community. These changes occurred only in the sputum microbiome of subjects with COPD and were still evident 42 days after infection. This was in contrast to the temporal stability demonstrated in the microbiome of healthy smokers and nonsmokers. CONCLUSIONS: After rhinovirus infection, there is a rise in bacterial burden and a significant outgrowth of Haemophilus influenzae from the existing microbiota of subjects with COPD. This is not observed in healthy individuals. Our findings suggest that rhinovirus infection in COPD alters the respiratory microbiome and may precipitate secondary bacterial infections.


Subject(s)
Microbiota , Picornaviridae Infections/microbiology , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/microbiology , Rhinovirus , Sputum/microbiology , Aged , Case-Control Studies , DNA, Bacterial/analysis , Disease Progression , Female , Genetic Markers , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Phylogeny , Picornaviridae Infections/complications , Prospective Studies , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/complications , Pulmonary Disease, Chronic Obstructive/virology , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/analysis , Sequence Analysis, DNA
4.
Bone ; 51(3): 528-34, 2012 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22634174

ABSTRACT

Biomineralization, the generation of hard tissues of living organisms, is a process strictly regulated by hormones, enzymes and a range of regulatory proteins of which several resisted structural characterization thus far. Without actual generalizations, there have been scattered observations in the literature for the structural disorder of these proteins. To address this issue in general, we have collected SwissProt proteins involved in the formation of bone and teeth in vertebrates, annotated for biomineralization. All these proteins show an extremely high level of predicted disorder (with a mean of 53%), making them the most disordered functional class of the protein world. Exactly the same feature was established for evolutionarily more distant proteins involved in the formation of the silica wall of marine diatoms and the shell of oysters and other mollusks. Because these proteins also show an extremely biased amino acid composition, such as high negative charge, high frequency of Ser and Asp or Pro residues and repetitiveness, we also carried out a database search with these sequence features for further proteins. This search uncovered several further disordered proteins with clearly related functions, although their annotations made no mention of biomineralization. This general and very strong correlation between biomineralization, structural disorder of proteins and particular sequence features indicates that regulated growth of mineral phase in biology can only be achieved by the assistance of highly disordered proteins.


Subject(s)
Calcification, Physiologic/physiology , Proteins/chemistry , Amino Acids/chemistry , Animals , Crystallization , Humans , Protein Conformation
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