1. Cytolysin‐positive Enterococcus faecalis is not increased in patients with non‐alcoholic steatohepatitis
- Author
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Yi Duan, Bernd Schnabl, Muenevver Demir, Anna Martin, and Sonja Lang
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Hepatology ,biology ,business.industry ,Fatty liver ,Alcoholic hepatitis ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,biology.organism_classification ,Gastroenterology ,Article ,Enterococcus faecalis ,Liver disease ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,bacteria ,Cytolysin ,Steatohepatitis ,business ,Dysbiosis - Abstract
Several studies show associations between gut bacterial dysbiosis and chronic liver diseases, but causative mechanisms are largely unclear. We recently identified cytolysin, a bacterial exotoxin expressed and secreted by Enterococcus faecalis to cause liver damage in the setting of alcohol-related liver disease. Cytolysin was increased and highly correlated with liver disease severity and mortality in alcoholic hepatitis patients. In this study, we investigated if faecal cytolysin-positivity can be linked to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, a highly prevalent disease where new biomarkers and treatment targets are urgently needed. In contrast to what we observed in alcoholic hepatitis, only seven out of 96 non-alcoholic fatty liver disease patients were cytolysin-positive, and these patients did not have increased liver disease activity compared with cytolysin-negative patients. These results indicate that the association of cytolysin carriage with worse clinical outcome might be specific for alcoholic hepatitis.
- Published
- 2020