Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Nature. 2018 Oct;562(7728):589-594. doi: 10.1038/s41586-018-0620-2. Epub 2018 Oct 24.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is an autoimmune disease that targets pancreatic islet beta cells and incorporates genetic and environmental factors, including complex genetic elements, patient exposures and the gut microbiome. Viral infections and broader gut dysbioses have been identified as potential causes or contributing factors; however, human studies have not yet identified microbial compositional or functional triggers that are predictive of islet autoimmunity or T1D. Here we analyse 10,913 metagenomes in stool samples from 783 mostly white, non-Hispanic children. The samples were collected monthly from three months of age until the clinical end point (islet autoimmunity or T1D) in the The Environmental Determinants of Diabetes in the Young (TEDDY) study, to characterize the natural history of the early gut microbiome in connection to islet autoimmunity, T1D diagnosis, and other common early life events such as antibiotic treatments and probiotics. The microbiomes of control children contained more genes that were related to fermentation and the biosynthesis of short-chain fatty acids, but these were not consistently associated with particular taxa across geographically diverse clinical centres, suggesting that microbial factors associated with T1D are taxonomically diffuse but functionally more coherent. When we investigated the broader establishment and development of the infant microbiome, both taxonomic and functional profiles were dynamic and highly individualized, and dominated in the first year of life by one of three largely exclusive Bifidobacterium species (B. bifidum, B. breve or B. longum) or by the phylum Proteobacteria. In particular, the strain-specific carriage of genes for the utilization of human milk oligosaccharide within a subset of B. longum was present specifically in breast-fed infants. These analyses of TEDDY gut metagenomes provide, to our knowledge, the largest and most detailed longitudinal functional profile of the developing gut microbiome in relation to islet autoimmunity, T1D and other early childhood events. Together with existing evidence from human cohorts and a T1D mouse model, these data support the protective effects of short-chain fatty acids in early-onset human T1D.
1 型糖尿病(T1D)是一种自身免疫性疾病,其靶器官是胰岛β细胞,并涉及遗传和环境因素,包括复杂的遗传因素、患者暴露和肠道微生物组。病毒感染和更广泛的肠道菌群失调已被确定为潜在的原因或促成因素;然而,人类研究尚未确定微生物组成或功能触发因素,这些因素可预测胰岛自身免疫或 T1D。在这里,我们分析了来自 783 名主要为白种人、非西班牙裔儿童的 10913 个粪便样本的宏基因组。这些样本是在 TEDDY 研究中从三个月大开始每月收集的,直到临床终点(胰岛自身免疫或 T1D),以描述早期肠道微生物组与胰岛自身免疫、T1D 诊断以及其他常见的早期生活事件(如抗生素治疗和益生菌)的自然史。对照儿童的微生物组包含更多与发酵和短链脂肪酸生物合成相关的基因,但这些基因在地理上不同的临床中心并没有与特定的分类群一致相关,这表明与 T1D 相关的微生物因素在分类上是弥散的,但在功能上更为一致。当我们研究婴儿微生物组的更广泛建立和发展时,分类和功能特征都是动态的,高度个体化的,并且在生命的第一年主要由三种基本上排他性双歧杆菌物种(B. bifidum、B. breve 或 B. longum)或厚壁菌门主导。特别是,在 B. longum 的一个亚群中,存在特定于利用人乳寡糖的基因的菌株特异性携带,仅存在于母乳喂养的婴儿中。这些 TEDDY 肠道宏基因组的分析提供了我们迄今为止关于与胰岛自身免疫、T1D 和其他儿童早期事件相关的发育中肠道微生物组的最大和最详细的纵向功能概况。与现有的人类队列和 T1D 小鼠模型的证据一起,这些数据支持短链脂肪酸在早期人类 T1D 中的保护作用。