Back to Search Start Over

Deviated and early unsustainable stunted development of gut microbiota in children with autism spectrum disorder

Authors :
Mingxing Lou
Aihua Cao
Cuiyuan Jin
Kai Mi
Xiyue Xiong
Zhaoyang Zeng
Xu Pan
Jinlong Qie
Shangfeng Qiu
Yaofang Niu
Hao Liang
Yanping Liu
Lin Chen
Zhi Liu
Qing Zhao
Xiyan Qiu
Yuanxiang Jin
Xiaoqi Sheng
Zhibin Hu
Gulei Jin
Jingshi Liu
Xingyin Liu
Yichao Wang
Source :
Gut. :gutjnl-2021
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ, 2021.

Abstract

ObjectiveRecent studies have provided insights into the gut microbiota in autism spectrum disorder (ASD); however, these studies were restricted owing to limited sampling at the unitary stage of childhood. Herein, we aimed to reveal developmental characteristics of gut microbiota in a large cohort of subjects with ASD combined with interindividual factors impacting gut microbiota.DesignA large cohort of 773 subjects with ASD (aged 16 months to 19 years), 429 neurotypical (NT) development subjects (aged 11 months to 15 years) were emolyed to determine the dynamics change of gut microbiota across different ages using 16S rRNA sequencing.ResultIn subjects with ASD, we observed a distinct but progressive deviation in the development of gut microbiota characterised by persistently decreased alpha diversity, early unsustainable immature microbiota, altered aboudance of 20 operational taxonomic units (OTUs), decreased taxon detection rate and 325 deregulated microbial metabolic functions with age-dependent patterns. We further revealed microbial relationships that have changed extensively in ASD before 3 years of age, which were associated with the severity of behaviour, sleep and GI symptoms in the ASD group. This analysis demonstrated that a signature of the combination of 2 OTUs, Veillonella and Enterobacteriaceae, and 17 microbial metabolic functions efficiently discriminated ASD from NT subjects in both the discovery (area under the curve (AUC)=0.86), and validation 1 (AUC=0.78), 2 (AUC=0.82) and 3 (AUC=0.67) sets.ConclusionOur large cohort combined with clinical symptom analysis highlights the key regulator of gut microbiota in the pathogenesis of ASD and emphasises the importance of monitoring and targeting the gut microbiome in future clinical applications of ASD.

Details

ISSN :
14683288 and 00175749
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Gut
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....64512687f9269e06d175423f06e4071b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2021-325115