Alkek Center for Metagenomics and Microbiome Research, Department of Molecular Virology and Microbiology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA.
mSphere. 2018 Mar 28;3(2). doi: 10.1128/mSphere.00092-18. eCollection 2018 Mar-Apr.
A wide diversity of fungi have been detected in the human gastrointestinal (GI) tract with the potential to provide or influence important functions. However, many of the fungi most commonly detected in stool samples are also present in food or the oral cavity. Therefore, to recognize which gut fungi are likely to have a sustained influence on human health, there is a need to separate transient members of the GI tract from true colonizers. To identify colonizing fungi, the eukaryotic rRNA operon's second internal transcribed spacer (ITS2) was sequenced from the stool, saliva, and food of healthy adults following consumption of different controlled diets. Unlike most bacterial 16S rRNA genes, the only fungal ITS2 operational taxonomic units (OTUs) detected in stool DNA across multiple diets were also present in saliva and/or food. Additional analyses, including culture-based approaches and sequencing of the 18S rRNA gene, ITS2 cDNA, and DNA extracted using alternative methods, failed to detect additional fungi. Two abundant fungi, Saccharomyces cerevisiae and Candida albicans, were examined further in healthy volunteers. became undetectable in stool when a S. cerevisiae-free diet was consumed, and the levels of C. albicans in stool were dramatically reduced by more frequent cleaning of teeth. Extremely low fungal abundance, the inability of fungi to grow under conditions mimicking the distal gut, and evidence from analysis of other public datasets further support the hypothesis that fungi do not routinely colonize the GI tracts of healthy adults. We sought to identify the fungi that colonize healthy GI tracts and that have a sustained influence on the diverse functions of the gut microbiome. Instead, we found that all fungi in the stool of healthy volunteers could be explained by their presence in oral and dietary sources and that our results, together with those from other analyses, support the model that there is little or no gastrointestinal colonization by fungi. This may be due to Westernization, primate evolution, fungal ecology, and/or the strong defenses of a healthy immune system. Importantly, fungal colonization of the GI tract may often be indicative of disease. As fungi can cause serious infections in immunocompromised individuals and are found at increased abundance in multiple disorders of the GI tract, understanding normal fungal colonization is essential for proper treatment and prevention of fungal pathogenesis.
人类胃肠道(GI)中检测到了广泛多样的真菌,这些真菌具有提供或影响重要功能的潜力。然而,许多在粪便样本中最常检测到的真菌也存在于食物或口腔中。因此,为了识别哪些肠道真菌可能对人类健康有持续影响,需要将 GI 道中的短暂成员与真正的定植菌区分开来。为了鉴定定植真菌,从健康成年人在摄入不同控制饮食后的粪便、唾液和食物中,对真核 rRNA 基因的第二个内部转录间隔区(ITS2)进行了测序。与大多数细菌 16S rRNA 基因不同,在所检测的粪便 DNA 中,在多种饮食中检测到的唯一真菌 ITS2 操作分类单位(OTUs)也存在于唾液和/或食物中。包括基于培养的方法以及对 18S rRNA 基因、ITS2 cDNA 和使用替代方法提取的 DNA 的测序在内的其他分析未能检测到其他真菌。对两种丰富的真菌,酿酒酵母和白色念珠菌,在健康志愿者中进行了进一步研究。当摄入不含酿酒酵母的饮食时,粪便中 S. cerevisiae 的含量变得无法检测,而通过更频繁地刷牙,粪便中 C. albicans 的水平显著降低。真菌丰度极低,真菌在模拟远端肠道的条件下无法生长的情况,以及对其他公共数据集的分析证据进一步支持了真菌通常不会定植健康成年人的胃肠道的假设。我们试图确定定植健康 GI 道并对肠道微生物组的多种功能具有持续影响的真菌。相反,我们发现健康志愿者粪便中的所有真菌都可以通过其在口腔和饮食来源中的存在来解释,并且我们的结果与其他分析一起,支持了这样的模型,即真菌在胃肠道中的定植很少或没有。这可能是由于西方化、灵长类动物进化、真菌生态学以及/或健康免疫系统的强大防御。重要的是,GI 道中的真菌定植通常可能是疾病的指征。由于真菌在免疫功能低下的个体中会引起严重感染,并且在多种胃肠道疾病中发现其丰度增加,因此了解正常的真菌定植对于正确治疗和预防真菌感染至关重要。