Altered metabolome and microbiome features provide clues in understanding irritable bowel syndrome and depression comorbidity

Author:

Han LijuanORCID,Zhao Ling,Zhou Yong,Yang Chao,Xiong Teng,Lu Lin,Deng Yusheng,Luo Wen,Chen Yang,Qiu Qinwei,Shang Xiaoxiao,Huang Li,Mo Zongchao,Huang Shaogang,Huang Suiping,Liu ZhiORCID,Yang Wei,Zhai Lixiang,Ning Ziwan,Lin Chengyuan,Huang Tao,Cheng Chungwah,Zhong Linda L. D.,Li ShuaichengORCID,Bian ZhaoxiangORCID,Fang XiaodongORCID

Abstract

AbstractIrritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is one of the functional gastrointestinal disorders characterized by chronic and/or recurrent symptoms of abdominal pain and irregular defecation. Changed gut microbiota has been proposed to mediate IBS; however, contradictory results exist, and IBS-specific microbiota, metabolites, and their interactions remain poorly understood. To address this issue, we performed metabolomic and metagenomic profiling of stool and serum samples based on discovery (n = 330) and validation (n = 101) cohorts. Fecal metagenomic data showed moderate dysbiosis compared with other diseases, in contrast, serum metabolites showed significant differences with greater power to distinguish IBS patients from healthy controls. Specifically, 726 differentially abundant serum metabolites were identified, including a cluster of fatty acyl-CoAs enriched in IBS. We further identified 522 robust associations between differentially abundant gut bacteria and fecal metabolites, of which three species including Odoribacter splanchnicus, Escherichia coli, and Ruminococcus gnavus were strongly associated with the low abundance of dihydropteroic acid. Moreover, dysregulated tryptophan/serotonin metabolism was found to be correlated with the severity of IBS depression in both fecal and serum metabolomes, characterized by a shift in tryptophan metabolism towards kynurenine production. Collectively, our study revealed serum/fecal metabolome alterations and their relationship with gut microbiome, highlighted the massive alterations of serum metabolites, which empower to recognize IBS patients, suggested potential roles of metabolic dysregulation in IBS pathogenesis, and offered new clues to understand IBS depression comorbidity. Our study provided a valuable resource for future studies, and would facilitate potential clinical applications of IBS featured microbiota and/or metabolites.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics,Microbiology

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