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Multi-omic Analysis of the Interaction between Clostridioides difficile Infection and Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Authors :
Sarah Marakos
Gary D. Wu
Judith R. Kelsen
Casey E. Hofstaedter
Joseph P. Zackular
Lisa M. Mattei
Michael Moraskie
Huanjia Zhang
Jessi Erlichman
Jessica Breton
Kyle Bittinger
Hongzhe Li
Robert Baldassano
Kevin J. Downes
Frederic D. Bushman
Christopher Petucci
James D. Lewis
Alissa Galgano
Jessica Hart
Minsoo Kim
Arwa Abbas
Kelly Kachelries
Dorothy Kim
Maire A. Conrad
Christopher H Gu
Chunyu Zhao
Yue Ren
Nina Devas
Source :
Cell Host & Microbe. 28:422-433.e7
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Summary Children with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are particularly vulnerable to infection with Clostridioides difficile (CDI). IBD and IBD + CDI have overlapping symptoms but respond to distinctive treatments, highlighting the need for diagnostic biomarkers. Here, we studied pediatric patients with IBD and IBD + CDI, comparing longitudinal data on the gut microbiome, metabolome, and other measures. The microbiome is dysbiotic and heterogeneous in both disease states, but the metabolome reveals disease-specific patterns. The IBD group shows increased concentrations of markers of inflammation and tissue damage compared with healthy controls, and metabolic changes associate with susceptibility to CDI. In IBD + CDI, we detect both metabolites associated with inflammation/tissue damage and fermentation products produced by C. difficile. The most discriminating metabolite found is isocaproyltaurine, a covalent conjugate of a distinctive C. difficile fermentation product (isocaproate) and an amino acid associated with tissue damage (taurine), which may be useful as a joint marker of the two disease processes.

Details

ISSN :
19313128
Volume :
28
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell Host & Microbe
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........1f2de54fdfc84ee24002000df08baa5c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chom.2020.07.020