| Literature DB >> 31911822 |
Mohammad Tauqeer Alam1, Gregory C A Amos2,3, Andrew R J Murphy2, Simon Murch1, Elizabeth M H Wellington2, Ramesh P Arasaradnam1,4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), is a debilitating group of chronic diseases including Crohn's Disease (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC), which causes inflammation of the gut and affects millions of people worldwide. At different taxonomic levels, the structure of the gut microbiota is significantly altered in IBD patients compared to that of healthy individuals. However, it is unclear how these IBD-affected bacterial groups are related to other common bacteria in the gut, and how they are connected across different disease conditions at the global scale.Entities:
Keywords: Crohn’s disease; Gut microbiota; Inflammatory bowel disease; Microbial imbalance; Ulcerative colitis
Year: 2020 PMID: 31911822 PMCID: PMC6942256 DOI: 10.1186/s13099-019-0341-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Gut Pathog ISSN: 1757-4749 Impact factor: 4.181
Fig. 1Microbial diversity and richness. a Species richness is substantially less in CD patient samples compared to the healthy control and UC patient samples. Shannon alpha diversity plot demonstrate that CD patients samples are less diverse compared to the healthy control and UC patient samples (inset figure). b Phylum level richness in the gut microbiota from our samples (left side Y-axis shown in green) compared to the global gut microbial species richness obtained across more than 20 K samples from a variety of conditions (right side Y-axis shown in black)
Fig. 2The gut microbial abundance. a Phylum, b Class and c Family level abundance in different conditions. Classes and families belonging to the four most abundant phylum across conditions are grouped according to phylum
Fig. 3The human gut bacteria family co-abundance. a, i The network represents the global human gut bacterial family coexistence considering the four most highly abundant gut bacterial phyla. The network connections are based on correlation test (P-value < 1e−10 and Pearson’s correlation coefficient > 0.3). Edge connection between families from the same phylum is shown in black lines whereas the family connection between different phyla is shown in grey lines. Family nodes are coloured according to phylum. a, ii This graph demonstrates the number of families (i.e. nodes) belonging to a different phylum in the global bacterial family coexistence. a, iii The percentage connection between families from the same phylum is substantially higher in the global bacterial family coexistence compared to a random network of the same size. b A subnetwork of the global human gut bacterial family coexistence network where the abundance level of at least one family node in a connection is > 1.5-fold higher in either CD or healthy condition against each other. c Similarly, a subnetwork of the global human gut bacterial family coexistence network where the abundance level of at least one family node in a connection is > 1.5 fold higher in either UC or healthy condition against each other. Edge connection between families from the same phylum is shown in black lines whereas the family connection between different phylum is shown in grey lines. Family belonging to different phyla are shown in different shapes. The node colour shows the increased abundance level in a disease (CD or UC) or healthy condition compared to each other. The size of the node represents the abundance level in a healthy condition