| Literature DB >> 25079328 |
Nan Qin1, Fengling Yang2, Ang Li2, Edi Prifti3, Yanfei Chen2, Li Shao1, Jing Guo4, Emmanuelle Le Chatelier5, Jian Yao6, Lingjiao Wu4, Jiawei Zhou4, Shujun Ni4, Lin Liu4, Nicolas Pons5, Jean Michel Batto5, Sean P Kennedy5, Pierre Leonard5, Chunhui Yuan4, Wenchao Ding4, Yuanting Chen4, Xinjun Hu4, Beiwen Zheng6, Guirong Qian4, Wei Xu4, S Dusko Ehrlich7, Shusen Zheng8, Lanjuan Li6.
Abstract
Liver cirrhosis occurs as a consequence of many chronic liver diseases that are prevalent worldwide. Here we characterize the gut microbiome in liver cirrhosis by comparing 98 patients and 83 healthy control individuals. We build a reference gene set for the cohort containing 2.69 million genes, 36.1% of which are novel. Quantitative metagenomics reveals 75,245 genes that differ in abundance between the patients and healthy individuals (false discovery rate < 0.0001) and can be grouped into 66 clusters representing cognate bacterial species; 28 are enriched in patients and 38 in control individuals. Most (54%) of the patient-enriched, taxonomically assigned species are of buccal origin, suggesting an invasion of the gut from the mouth in liver cirrhosis. Biomarkers specific to liver cirrhosis at gene and function levels are revealed by a comparison with those for type 2 diabetes and inflammatory bowel disease. On the basis of only 15 biomarkers, a highly accurate patient discrimination index is created and validated on an independent cohort. Thus microbiota-targeted biomarkers may be a powerful tool for diagnosis of different diseases.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25079328 DOI: 10.1038/nature13568
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962