a Infection and Immunity Theme , South Australia Health and Medical Research Institute , Adelaide , Australia.
b SAHMRI Microbiome Research Laboratory , Flinders University School of Medicine , Adelaide , Australia.
Gut Microbes. 2019;10(3):367-381. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2018.1534512. Epub 2018 Oct 25.
Chronic disruption of the intestinal microbiota in adult cystic fibrosis (CF) patients is associated with local and systemic inflammation, and has been linked to the risk of serious comorbidities. Supplementation with high amylose maize starch (HAMS) might provide clinical benefit by promoting commensal bacteria and the biosynthesis of immunomodulatory metabolites. However, whether the disrupted CF gut microbiota has the capacity to utilise these substrates is not known. We combined metagenomic sequencing, fermentation, amplicon sequencing, and metabolomics to define the characteristics of the faecal microbiota in adult CF patients and assess HAMS fermentation capacity. Compared to healthy controls, the faecal metagenome of adult CF patients had reduced bacterial diversity and prevalence of commensal fermentative clades. fermentation models seeded with CF faecal slurries exhibited reduced acetate levels compared to healthy control reactions, but comparable levels of butyrate and propionate. While the commensal genus was strongly associated with short chain fatty acid (SCFA) production by healthy microbiota, it was displaced in this role by 1 in the microbiota of CF patients. A subset of CF reactions exhibited enterococcal overgrowth, resulting in lactate accumulation and reduced SCFA biosynthesis. The addition of healthy microbiota to CF faecal slurries failed to displace predominant CF taxa, or substantially influence metabolite biosynthesis. Despite significant microbiota disruption, the adult CF gut microbiota retains the capacity to exploit HAMS. Our findings highlight the potential for taxa associated with the altered CF gut microbiotato mediate prebiotic effects in microbial systems subject to ongoing perturbation, irrespective of the depletion of common commensal clades.
成人囊性纤维化 (CF) 患者的肠道微生物群持续紊乱与局部和全身炎症有关,并与严重合并症的风险相关。高直链玉米淀粉 (HAMS) 的补充可能通过促进共生菌和免疫调节代谢物的生物合成提供临床益处。然而,受损的 CF 肠道微生物群是否有能力利用这些底物尚不清楚。我们结合宏基因组测序、发酵、扩增子测序和代谢组学来定义成人 CF 患者粪便微生物群的特征,并评估 HAMS 发酵能力。与健康对照组相比,成人 CF 患者的粪便宏基因组中细菌多样性和共生发酵类群的流行率降低。用 CF 粪便悬浮液接种的发酵模型与健康对照反应相比,乙酸水平降低,但丁酸和丙酸水平相当。虽然共生属与健康微生物群的短链脂肪酸 (SCFA) 产生强烈相关,但在 CF 患者的微生物群中,它被 1 取代了这一作用。CF 反应的一部分表现出肠球菌过度生长,导致乳酸积累和 SCFA 生物合成减少。将健康微生物群添加到 CF 粪便悬浮液中未能取代主要的 CF 分类群,也未能显著影响代谢物生物合成。尽管存在明显的微生物群破坏,但成人 CF 肠道微生物群仍保留了利用 HAMS 的能力。我们的研究结果强调了与改变的 CF 肠道微生物群相关的分类群在持续受到干扰的微生物系统中发挥益生元作用的潜力,而不管常见共生类群的消耗如何。