| Literature DB >> 20015409 |
Lotta Krogius-Kurikka1, Anna Lyra, Erja Malinen, Johannes Aarnikunnas, Jarno Tuimala, Lars Paulin, Harri Mäkivuokko, Kajsa Kajander, Airi Palva.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A growing amount of scientific evidence suggests that microbes are involved in the aetiology of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and the gastrointestinal (GI) microbiota of individuals suffering from diarrhoea-predominant IBS (IBS-D) is distinguishable from other IBS-subtypes. In our study, the GI microbiota of IBS-D patients was evaluated and compared with healthy controls (HC) by using a high-resolution sequencing method. The method allowed microbial community analysis on all levels of microbial genomic guanine plus cytosine (G+C) content, including high G+C bacteria.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 20015409 PMCID: PMC2807867 DOI: 10.1186/1471-230X-9-95
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Figure 1Distribution of sequences and OTUs among IBS-D and HC clone libraries. The unique sequences or OTUs (cut-off-level of 98%) in the IBS-D and HC libraries are indicated in red and blue, respectively. The grey area in the group-wise bars is a mirror-image of shared sequences or OTUs and it is presented on both sides of the y-axis. The number of singleton OTUs is given in parentheses. The roman numerals XIV and IV within the Firmicutes indicate the corresponding Clostridium rRNA clusters, 1) Other Firmicutes, 2) Acidobacteria, Cyanobacteria, TM7 and Verrucomicrobia.
Characteristics of the IBS-D and HC libraries.
| IBS-D library | Combined libraries | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| No. of subjects in pooled sample | 23 | 10 | - |
| No. of sequences | 3267 | 3199 | 6466 |
| Average sequence %G+C | 55.7 | 56.2 | 55.9 |
| No. of OTUs (98%) c | 302 | 428 | 578 |
| Singletons | 131 | 170 | 245 |
| Coverage d | 96.0 | 96.2 | 94.7 |
| Shannon H e | 4.463 | 5.042 | 5.013 |
| Simpson 1/D f | 37.21 | 81.03 | 63.10 |
| Chao g | 515 | 613 | 899 |
| ACE h | 533 | 659 | 962 |
a. The library characteristics are based on separate and common alignments created for IBS-D and HC sequences.
b. Sequence data from Krogius-Kurikka et al. [16].
c. A 98% cut-off level for sequence similarity was used to delimit OTUs in the analyses.
d. Library coverage according to Good et al. [41].
e. Index for diversity [38].
f. Index for diversity [37].
g. Chao-1 richness estimator by Chao [39].
h. Abundance-based coverage estimator by Chao et al. [40].
Figure 2Rank-abundance plots of the IBS-D and HC libraries. The curves for IBS-D and HC libraries are indicated in red and blue, respectively. To make the image more compact, the OTUs with the highest number of sequences are deleted (an OTU of 395 sequences for IBS-D and an OTU of 160 sequences for HC).
Figure 3Relative abundance of phyla in the IBS-D and HC libraries in the RDP library compare analysis [34]. Significantly differing (p < 0.01) abundances of sequences (s) or OTUs with a cut-off-level of 98% for sequence similarity (o) between the IBS-D and HC libraries are indicated. The "unclassified" phyla have a bootstrap value below 80%.
Figure 4Percentage of shared and unique OTUs (n = 578) and sequences (n = 6466) in the combined IBS-D and HC libraries. Number of sequences and OTUs (cut-off-level of 98%) are given in parentheses. The number of singletons is indicated after a semicolon. A common alignment was used for the determination of shared OTUs.
Figure 5Abundance of shared OTUs. Proportion of shared OTUs in the IBS-D and HC libraries according to the SONS analysis [36].
Figure 6Real-time PCR results from assays for . Samples from IBS-D and HC subjects are in red and blue, respectively. The values are 16S rRNA gene copy numbers per gram of faeces (log10 values), and the detection limit is set to 104. Vertical lines are medians from the Mann-Whitney U-test.