| Literature DB >> 32792610 |
Joonbum Seo1, Linda Matthewman2, Dong Xia3, Jenny Wilshaw4, Yu-Mei Chang3, David J Connolly4.
Abstract
Compromised gut health and dysbiosis in people with heart failure has received a great deal of attention over the last decade. Whether dogs with heart failure have a similar dysbiosis pattern to what is described in people is currently unknown. We hypothesised that dogs with congestive heart failure have quantifiable dysbiosis compared to healthy dogs that are similar in sex and age. A total of 50 dogs (15 healthy dogs and 35 dogs with congestive heart failure) were prospectively recruited, and their faecal gut microbiome was assessed using 16S rRNA sequencing (Illumina MiSeq platform). There was no significant change in the microbial diversity and richness in dogs with congestive heart failure. However, there was an increase in abundance of Proteobacteria in the congestive heart failure group (p = 0.014), particularly due to an increase in the family Enterobacteriaceae (p = 0.002) and Escherichia coli (p = 0.033). We conclude that dogs with congestive heart failure have dysbiosis, and we show additional trends in our data suggesting that dogs may have a similar pattern to that described in people. The results of this study provide useful preliminary information and raise the possibility that dogs represent a clinically relevant animal model of dysbiosis in people with heart failure.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32792610 PMCID: PMC7426839 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-70826-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Demographic characteristics of the control and congestive heart failure (CHF) groups.
| Control (n = 15) | CHF (n = 35) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 8.0 [6.9–10.0] | 10.2 [7.9–10.9] | 0.141 | |
| 0.462 | |||
| Female (%) | 7 (46.7%) | 10 (28.6%) | |
| Neutered: entire | 7:0 | 10:0 | |
| Male (%) | 8 (53.3%) | 25 (71.4%) | |
| Neutered: entire | 5:3 | 15:10 | |
| 0.106 | |||
| Small breeds | 4 (26.7%) | 18 (51.4%) | |
| Large breeds | 11 (73.3%) | 17 (48.6%) | |
| 20.3 [12.1–33.0] | 12.0 [7.3–42.5] | 0.352 | |
| 1/9 | 0 | 1 (2.9%) | |
| 2/9 | 0 | 4 (11.4%) | |
| 3/9 | 0 | 8 (22.9%) | |
| 4/9 | 3 (20.0%) | 4 (40.0%) | |
| 5/9 | 6 (40.0%) | 6 (17.1%) | |
| 6/9 | 6 (40.0%) | 2 (5.7%) | |
| Normal | 15 (100%) | 8 (22.8%) | |
| Mild | 0 | 11 (31.4%) | |
| Moderate | 0 | 9 (25.7%) | |
| Severe | 0 | 6 (17.1%) | |
| Dog food | 15 (100%) | 33 (94.3%) | 1.000 |
| Human food | 5 (33.3%) | 23 (65.7%) | 0.061 |
| Normal | 15 (100%) | 13 (37.1%) | |
| Reduced | 0 | 22 (62.9%) | |
| – | 6.0 [3.0–28.0] | – | |
| Diuretic dose (mg/kg/day) | – | 4.4 [3.4–7.1] | – |
| Furosemide | 0 | 28 (80.0%) | – |
| Torsemide | 0 | 4 (11.4%) | – |
| Pimobendan | 0 | 33 (94.3%) | – |
| Benazepril | 0 | 25 (71.4%) | – |
| Spironolactone | 0 | 23 (65.7%) | – |
| Fish oil | 0 | 4 (11.4%) | – |
| Diltiazem/digoxin | 0 | 9 (25.7%) | – |
aOne dog in the CHF group was missing a muscle condition score. The results are displayed as median [25th, 75th percentiles] as they were non-normally distributed. Statistical significance (p < 0.05) is marked bold.
The alpha diversity results from the 16S rRNA sequencing.
| Alpha diversity | Control (n = 15) | CHF (n = 35) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OTU | 97.7 (± 18.0) | 97.2 (± 22.7) | 0.946 |
| Shannon index | 4.3 (± 0.6) | 4.2 (± 0.6) | 0.575 |
| Faith’s PD | 10.7 (± 1.8) | 11.1 (± 2.0) | 0.481 |
The results are displayed as mean (± s.d.) as they were normally distributed.
CHF congestive heart failure, OTU operational taxonomic units, Faith’s PD Faith’s phylogenetic diversity.
Figure 1Comparison of alpha (A) and beta diversity (B) between the control and congestive heart failure (CHF) groups. The line in the alpha rarefaction curves (A) marks the mean and the error bars mark the standard deviation. The principle coordinate analysis plot shows the results of Bray–Curtis dissimilarity analysis (B). There was no statistical significance between the two groups in both analyses.
Taxa analysis at Phylum level.
| Phylum | Control (n = 15) | CHF (n = 35) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Firmicutes (%) | 46.8 [36.7–57.0] | 47.3 [31.3–62.4] | 0.907 |
| Fusobacteria (%) | 25.8 [19.6–36.6] | 20.6 [9.9–33.4] | 0.153 |
| Bacteroides (%) | 17.7 [10.1–25.2] | 17.7 [6.7–27.6] | 0.975 |
| Proteobacteria (%) | 2.6 [1.0–4.9] | 6.6 [2.4–11.7] | |
| Actinobacteria (%) | 0.6 [0.2–1.7] | 0.8 [0.2–1.6] | 0.759 |
The median percentage abundance [25th, 75th percetiles] is displayed for the control and congestive heart failure (CHF) groups. Statistical significance (p < 0.05) is marked bold.
Figure 2Stacked bar graphs showing the median percentage abundance of gut microbiota at the Phylum level.
Figure 3Results of linear discriminant analysis effect size (LEfSe). The cladogram (A) shows differentially abundant bacterial taxa from the phylum to the species level. The LEfSe result at the species level is further displayed in a plot (B). Only LEfSe scores > 2 are shown.
Figure 4Box plots showing the results of 16S rRNA sequencing of differentially abundant bacterial species. The box shows the respective 25th and 75th percentiles, the line within the box represented median value, and the whiskers show the lowest and highest data points still within 1.5 times the interquartile range of the respective lower and upper quartiles.