Section of Immunology, Allergy and Rheumatology, Department of Pediatrics, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.
Texas Children's Hospital, Houston, TX, USA.
Pediatr Allergy Immunol. 2018 Aug;29(5):545-554. doi: 10.1111/pai.12904. Epub 2018 May 15.
Intestinal microbes have been shown to influence predisposition to atopic disease, including food allergy. The intestinal microbiome of food-allergic children may differ in significant ways from genetically similar non-allergic children and age-matched controls. The aim was to characterize fecal microbiomes to identify taxa that may influence the expression of food allergy.
Stool samples were collected from children with IgE-mediated food allergies, siblings without food allergy, and non-allergic controls. Stool microbiome characterization was performed via next-generation sequencing (Illumina) of the V1V3 and V4 variable regions of the 16S rRNA gene. Bacterial diversity, evenness, richness, and relative abundance of the operational taxonomic units (OTUs) were evaluated using QIIME. ANOVA and Welch's t test were utilized to compare groups.
Sixty-eight children were included: food-allergic (n = 22), non-food-allergic siblings (n = 25), and controls (n = 21). When comparing fecal microbial communities across groups, differences were noted in Rikenellaceae (P = .035), Actinomycetaceae (P = .043), and Pasteurellaceae (P = .018), and nine other distinct OTUs. Food-allergic subjects had enrichment for specific microbes within the Clostridia class and Firmicutes phylum (Oscillobacter valericigenes, Lachnoclostridium bolteae, Faecalibacterium sp.) compared to siblings and controls. Identification of Clostridium sp. OTUs revealed differences in specific Clostridia drive the separation of the allergic from the siblings and controls. Alistipes sp. were enriched in non-allergic siblings.
Comparisons in the fecal microbiome of food-allergic children, siblings, and healthy children point to key differences in microbiome signatures, suggesting the role of both genetic and environmental contributors in the manifestation of food-allergic disease.
肠道微生物已被证明会影响特应性疾病(包括食物过敏)的易感性。食物过敏儿童的肠道微生物组可能与遗传相似的非过敏儿童和年龄匹配的对照存在显著差异。本研究旨在对粪便微生物组进行特征分析,以确定可能影响食物过敏表型的分类群。
收集食物过敏儿童、无食物过敏的兄弟姐妹和非过敏对照的粪便样本。通过对 16S rRNA 基因的 V1V3 和 V4 可变区进行下一代测序(Illumina),对粪便微生物组特征进行分析。使用 QIIME 评估细菌多样性、均匀度、丰富度和操作分类单元(OTUs)的相对丰度。采用 ANOVA 和 Welch's t 检验比较组间差异。
共纳入 68 名儿童:食物过敏组(n=22)、非食物过敏的兄弟姐妹组(n=25)和对照组(n=21)。比较各组粪便微生物群落时,发现 Rikenellaceae(P=0.035)、Actinomycetaceae(P=0.043)和 Pasteurellaceae(P=0.018)以及其他 9 个不同的 OTUs 存在差异。与兄弟姐妹和对照组相比,食物过敏组中 Clostridia 类和 Firmicutes 门的特定微生物(Oscillobacter valericigenes、Lachnoclostridium bolteae、Faecalibacterium sp.)丰度增加。鉴定的 Clostridium sp.OTUs 表明,特定 Clostridia 分类群的差异是导致过敏组与兄弟姐妹和对照组分离的原因。非过敏的兄弟姐妹中 Alistipes sp. 丰度增加。
对食物过敏儿童、兄弟姐妹和健康儿童的粪便微生物组进行比较,指出了微生物组特征的关键差异,提示遗传和环境因素在食物过敏疾病表现中的共同作用。