Pre-Diagnostic Saliva Microbiota of School-Aged Children Who Developed Type 1 Diabetes or Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Author:

Räisänen Laura123,Agrawal Nitin34ORCID,Mathew Binu3,Kääriäinen Sohvi5,Kolho Kaija-Leena146ORCID,Viljakainen Heli35ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine and Health Technology (MET), Tampere University, 33100 Tampere, Finland

2. Department of Pediatrics, Tampere University Hospital, 33520 Tampere, Finland

3. Folkhälsan Research Center, 00250 Helsinki, Finland

4. Faculty of Medicine, University of Helsinki, 00014 Helsinki, Finland

5. Finnish Institute for Health and Welfare, 00271 Helsinki, Finland

6. Children’s Hospital, University of Helsinki and Helsinki University Hospital (HUS), 00290 Helsinki, Finland

Abstract

Altered commensal microbiota composition has been associated with pediatric type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1D) and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD), but the causal relationship is still unclear. To search for potential pre-diagnostic biomarkers for pediatric T1D or IBD, we compared microbiota in saliva samples in a nested case-control design comprising children developing T1D (nchildren = 52) or IBD (nchildren = 21) and controls with a similar age, sex, and residential area (nchildren = 79). The pre-diagnostic saliva microbiota alpha- and beta-diversity of children who would develop T1D (nsamples = 27) or IBD (nsamples = 14) minimally varied from that of controls. The relative abundances of Abiotrophia were higher, while those of Veillonella, Actinomyces, Megasphaera, Butyrivibrio, and Candidatus ancillula were lower in children who would develop T1D. Within 2 years before diagnosis, the metabolic PWY-5677 pathway (converting succinate into butyrate) was lower in pre-T1D samples than in controls (q = 0.034). No significant pre-IBD differences were found. In conclusion, saliva microbiota diversity or composition were not successful predictors for pediatric T1D nor IBD. Intriguingly, the succinate fermentation pathway was predicted to be lowered before the onset of T1D. Thus, investigating functional pathways might provide a better approach in searching for biomarkers for autoimmune disease in the future.

Funder

Päivikki and Sakari Sohlberg Foundation

Swedish Cultural Foundation in Finland

Folkhälsan Research Foundation governed by HV

Pediatric Research Foundation

Helsinki University Hospital Research Fund

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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