| Literature DB >> 26758906 |
Ranjit Kumar1, Craig L Maynard2, Peter Eipers3, Kelly T Goldsmith4, Travis Ptacek1,5, J Aaron Grubbs6, Paula Dixon6, Donna Howard2, David K Crossman4, Michael R Crowley4, William H Benjamin2, Elliot J Lefkowitz1,5, Casey T Weaver2, J Martin Rodriguez6, Casey D Morrow7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fecal microbiota transplants (FMT) are an effective treatment for patients with gut microbe dysbiosis suffering from recurrent C. difficile infections. To further understand how FMT reconstitutes the patient's gut commensal microbiota, we have analyzed the colonization potential of the donor, recipient and recipient post transplant fecal samples using transplantation in gnotobiotic mice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26758906 PMCID: PMC4711103 DOI: 10.1186/s12866-015-0622-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Microbiol ISSN: 1471-2180 Impact factor: 3.605
Fig. 1Comparison of the microbial diversity of human donors and recipients pre and post FMT. Principal Coordinate analysis is used to generate 3D PCoA plot (using weighted UniFrac distance metrics) for the fecal samples from the donor (D) and recipient (R) and post FMT (RpT)
Fig. 2Taxa distribution of human donors and recipients pre and post transplant. A stacked bar plot depicting the taxa distribution at the family level of the fecal samples of individual samples from the donors and recipient pre and post FMT
Fig. 3Comparison of the microbiota community in gnotobiotic mice transplanted with fecal samples from donors, recipients pre and post transplant. Gnotobiotic mice were transplanted with the human fecal samples from donor, recipient and RpT samples from FMT 1, 2 and 4. Panel a PCoA plot of the fecal samples from all the gnotobiotic mice. The mice transplanted with donor, recipient, and RpT are named as MD, MR and MRpT, respectively. The orange colored spheres are from mice transplanted with the recipient (1, 2 or 4) samples (MR), the blue spheres are from mice transplanted with donor (1, 2 or 4) (MD) and the yellow spheres are mice transplanted with fecal samples of the FMT (MRpT). Panel b, c and d Individual PCoA plots of donor, recipient and RpT from set 1 (Panel b), 2 (Panel c) and 4 (Pane d) transplanted into gnotobiotic mice. Each panel represents the PCoA plot of individual mice transplanted with the donor and recipient pre and post FMT (RpT)
Fig. 4Taxa distribution of the microbial composition of mouse transplanted with donor, recipient pre and post FMT. A stacked bar plot depicting the taxa distribution at the family level of the fecal samples of individual gnotobiotic mice transplanted with samples from the donors and recipient pre and post FMT
Fig. 5Shannon diversity for gnotobiotic mice transplanted with donor, recipient pre and post FMT. Alpha diversity (Shannon’s diversity) for gnotobiotic mice transplanted with the donor (blue), recipients pre (orange) and post FMT (yellow) microbiota presented as a box plot
Fig. 6Comparison of relative abundance of selected taxa (family level). The human samples are colored in blue and the gntobiotic mice samples are colored orange. Panel a The relative abundance of Bacteroides in the human donors and post FMT and their corresponding transplants in gnotobiotic mice. Panel b The relative abundance of Lachnospiraceae in the human donors and post FMT and their corresponding transplant in gnotobiotic mice