1. Effect of Helicobacter pylori on gastrointestinal microbiota: a population-based study in Linqu, a high-risk area of gastric cancer
- Author
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Kurt Ulm, Zhe-Xuan Li, Michael Quante, Stepan Suchanek, Wei-Dong Liu, Jun-Ling Ma, Lian Zhang, Raquel Mejías-Luque, Markus Gerhard, Michael Vieth, Wen-Qing Li, Meinhard Classen, Yang Guo, Wei-Cheng You, Kai-Feng Pan, Yang Zhang, Tong Zhou, Monther Bajbouj, Roland M. Schmid, and Juan-Juan Gao
- Subjects
Gastritis, Atrophic ,Male ,bacterial interactions ,Biopsy ,Gut flora ,medicine.disease_cause ,Deep sequencing ,Helicobacter Infections ,Feces ,Stomach Neoplasms ,RNA, Ribosomal, 16S ,Humans ,Medicine ,Helicobacter ,Gut Microbiota ,Metaplasia ,Helicobacter pylori ,biology ,business.industry ,Gastrointestinal microbiota ,Gastroenterology ,helicobacter pylori - treatment ,Cancer ,gastric diseases ,gastric pre-cancer ,Middle Aged ,biology.organism_classification ,medicine.disease ,ddc ,Anti-Bacterial Agents ,Gastrointestinal Microbiome ,Gastric Mucosa ,Immunology ,Dysbiosis ,Microbial Interactions ,Female ,business ,Carcinogenesis - Abstract
ObjectiveGastrointestinal microbiota may be involved in Helicobacter pylori-associated gastric cancer development. The aim of this study was to explore the possible microbial mechanisms in gastric carcinogenesis and potential dysbiosis arising from H. pylori infection.DesignDeep sequencing of the microbial 16S ribosomal RNA gene was used to investigate alterations in paired gastric biopsies and stool samples in 58 subjects with successful and 57 subjects with failed anti-H. pylori treatment, relative to 49 H. pylori negative subjects.ResultsIn H. pylori positive subjects, richness and Shannon indexes increased significantly (both pH. pylori positive mucosa was associated with advanced gastric lesions (chronic atrophic gastritis and intestinal metaplasia/dysplasia) and could be reversed by eradication. Strong coexcluding interactions between Helicobacter and Fusobacterium, Neisseria, Prevotella, Veillonella, Rothia were found only in advanced gastric lesion patients, and were absent in normal/superficial gastritis group. Changes in faecal microbiota included increased Bifidobacterium after successful H. pylori eradication and more upregulated drug-resistant functional orthologs after failed treatment.ConclusionH. pylori infection contributes significantly to gastric microbial dysbiosis that may be involved in carcinogenesis. Successful H. pylori eradication potentially restores gastric microbiota to a similar status as found in uninfected individuals, and shows beneficial effects on gut microbiota.
- Published
- 2019
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