Fecal Microbial Composition and Predicted Functional Profile in Irritable Bowel Syndrome Differ between Subtypes and Geographical Locations

Author:

Garcia-Mazcorro Jose F.1ORCID,Amieva-Balmori Mercedes2,Triana-Romero Arturo2ORCID,Wilson Bridgette3,Smith Leanne3,Reyes-Huerta Job2,Rossi Megan3,Whelan Kevin3ORCID,Remes-Troche Jose M.2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research and Development, MNA de Mexico, San Nicolas de los Garza 66477, Mexico

2. Instituto de Investigaciones Médico Biológicas, Universidad Veracruzana, Veracruz 91700, Mexico

3. Department of Nutritional Sciences, King’s College London, London WC2R 2LS, UK

Abstract

Increasing evidence suggests a microbial pathogenesis in irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) but the relationship remains elusive. Fecal DNA samples from 120 patients with IBS, 82 Mexican (IBS-C: n = 33, IBS-D: n = 24, IBS-M: n = 25) and 38 British (IBS-C: n = 6, IBS-D: n = 27, IBS-M: n = 5), were available for analysis using 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Firmicutes (mean: 82.1%), Actinobacteria (10.2%), and Bacteroidetes (4.4%) were the most abundant taxa. The analysis of all samples (n = 120), and females (n = 94) only, showed no significant differences in bacterial microbiota, but the analysis of Mexican patients (n = 82) showed several differences in key taxa (e.g., Faecalibacterium) among the different IBS subtypes. In IBS-D there were significantly higher Bacteroidetes in British patients (n = 27) than in Mexican patients (n = 24), suggesting unique fecal microbiota signatures within the same IBS subtype. These differences in IBS-D were also observed at lower phylogenetic levels (e.g., higher Enterobacteriaceae and Streptococcus in Mexican patients) and were accompanied by differences in several alpha diversity metrics. Beta diversity was not different among IBS subtypes when using all samples, but the analysis of IBS-D patients revealed consistent differences between Mexican and British patients. This study suggests that fecal microbiota is different between IBS subtypes and also within each subtype depending on geographical location.

Funder

Newton Fund

CONACYT

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Virology,Microbiology (medical),Microbiology

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