| Literature DB >> 29214047 |
Ninalynn Daquigan1, Anna Maria Seekatz2, K Leigh Greathouse3, Vincent B Young2, James Robert White1.
Abstract
Microbiome profiling through 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis has proven to be a useful research tool in the study of C. difficile infection (CDI); however, CDI microbiome studies typically report results at the genus level or higher, thus precluding identification of this pathogen relative to other members of the gut microbiota. Accurate identification of C. difficile relative to the overall gut microbiome may be useful in assessments of colonization in research studies or as a prognostic indicator for patients with CDI. To investigate the burden of C. difficile at the species level relative to the overall gut microbiome, we applied a high-resolution method for 16S rRNA sequence assignment to previously published gut microbiome studies of CDI and other patient populations. We identified C. difficile in 131 of 156 index cases of CDI (average abundance 1.78%), and 18 of 211 healthy controls (average abundance 0.008%). We further detected substantial levels of C. difficile in a subset of infants that persisted over the first two to 12 months of life. Correlation analysis of C. difficile burden compared to other detected species demonstrated consistent negative associations with C. scindens and multiple Blautia species. These analyses contribute insight into the relative burden of C. difficile in the gut microbiome for multiple patient populations, and indicate that high-resolution 16S rRNA gene sequence analysis may prove useful in the development and evaluation of new therapies for CDI.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29214047 PMCID: PMC5717231 DOI: 10.1038/s41522-017-0043-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Biofilms Microbiomes ISSN: 2055-5008 Impact factor: 7.290
False positive rates for 22 related species
| Species from clostridium XI cluster | False positive rate (%) |
|---|---|
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| 0 |
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| 0.01 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0.07 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
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| 0 |
Fig. 1Relative burden of C. difficile in the gut microbiome of two cohorts of CDI index patients and healthy controls. a Index cases of recurrent CDI (Seekatz et al.) and b CDI index patients (Khanna et al.) frequently harbored moderate to high levels of C. difficile. c Healthy controls. Overall 91.5% of controls had no detectable C. difficile and 0.9% maintained C. difficile levels higher than 0.1%
C. difficile relative abundances in cases of CDI from Seekatz et al.[10] compared to healthy controls
| Detected | Distribution (% of patients) | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IDSA category | Mean | Median | Max |
| CD > 0% | CD > 0.01% | CD > 0.05% | CD > 0.10% | |
| Index case | Non-severe | 2.3 | 0.33 | 42.9 | 38 | 81.6% | 78.9% | 65.8% | 63.2% |
| Severe | 4.07 | 0.09 | 51.5 | 30 | 86.7% | 76.7% | 53.3% | 50.0% | |
| NA | 1.61 | 1.61 | 3.2 | 2 | 50.0% | 50.0% | 50.0% | 50.0% | |
| Recurrence | Non-severe | 9.36 | 3.84 | 42.6 | 20 | 85.0% | 80.0% | 75.0% | 75.0% |
| Severe | 1.19 | 0.64 | 7.1 | 9 | 77.8% | 66.7% | 66.7% | 66.7% | |
| NA | 1.53 | 0.07 | 11.3 | 9 | 55.6% | 55.6% | 55.6% | 44.4% | |
| Reinfection | Non-severe | 3.38 | 0.55 | 19.3 | 16 | 62.5% | 62.5% | 56.3% | 56.3% |
| Severe | 3.29 | 0.54 | 14.5 | 14 | 85.7% | 71.4% | 64.3% | 57.1% | |
| NA | 2.8 | 0.21 | 10.1 | 9 | 77.8% | 77.8% | 77.8% | 55.6% | |
| Healthy controls | No disease | 0.008 | 0 | 1.2 | 211 | 8.5% | 3.8% | 1.9% | 0.9% |
NA data not available, CD C. difficile abundance
Fig. 2Distribution of C. difficile during longitudinal gut microbiome sampling of infants. a Pre-term infants in a NICU, including those developing necrotizing enterocolitis (purple) and normal (grey). Each boxplot reflects a single patient with multiple time points (total samples per patient shown along the x-axis). b A longitudinal case study of an infant before (red) and after (blue) weaning during the first 18 months of life. During the transition to cow’s milk, C. difficile relative abundance fell to undetectable levels
Fig. 3Correlation analysis identifies species positively or negatively associated with C. difficile. The CCREPE N-dimensional checkerboard score (y-axis) incorporates the ratio of co-variation to co-exclusion patterns normalized to a range of (−1, +1). In addition to C. scindens, we identify significant negative correlations with C. difficile for members of Blautia and positive correlations with other Clostridia and Veillonella spp. (*P ≤ 0.05). Ambiguous species level assignments are denoted by slashes. Key for re-analyzed datasets from the following studies: Recurrent CDI=[10], Index CDI=[21], FMT=[9], Infant longitudinal=[16], NICU=[23] (Table S2)