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Metagenomic Analysis of Microbiome in Colon Tissue from Subjects with Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Reveals Interplay of Viruses and Bacteria

Authors :
Brendan P. Halloran
Weiwei Wang
Tracy Jordan
Eytan Wine
Deyong Song
Richard N. Fedorak
Jordan Patterson
Bo Meng
Karen Madsen
Eric J. Carpenter
Andrew Mason
Mandana Rahbari
Glenn Ford
Juan Jovel
Sandra OʼKeefe
Gane Ka-Shu Wong
Zhijian Tian
Levinus A. Dielemann
Troy Mitchell
Shawn T. Wasilenko
Yong Zhang
Salman Reza
Source :
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, 2015.

Abstract

Article first published online 29 April 2015.<br />Inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, are poorly understood disorders affecting the intestinal tract. The current model for disease suggests that genetically susceptible patients develop intolerance to gut microflora, and chronic inflammation develops as a result of environmental insults. Although interest has mainly focused on studying genetic variants and gut bacterial flora, little is known about the potential of viral infection to contribute to disease. Accordingly, we conducted a metagenomic analysis to document the baseline virome in colonic biopsy samples from patients with IBD in order to assess the contribution of viral infection to IBD. Libraries were generated from colon RNA to create approximately 2 GB sequence data per library. Using a bioinformatic pipeline designed to detect viral sequences, more than 1000 viral reads were derived directly from tissue without any coculture or isolation procedure. Herein, we describe the complexity and abundance of viruses, bacteria/bacteriophage, and human endogenous retroviral sequences from 10 patients with IBD and 5 healthy subjects undergoing surveillance colonoscopy. Differences in gut microflora and the abundance of mammalian viruses and human endogenous retroviruses were readily detected in the metagenomic analyses. Specifically, patients with herpesviridae sequences in their colon demonstrated increased expression of human endogenous viral sequences and differences in the diversity of their microbiome. This study provides a promising metagenomic approach to describe the colonic microbiome that can be used to better understand virus–host and phage–bacteria interactions in IBD.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15364844 and 10780998
Volume :
21
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e084824d9910264ca93c20851f223bbd