| Literature DB >> 35629390 |
Martina Takáčová1, Alojz Bomba2, Csilla Tóthová3, Alena Micháľová1, Hana Turňa1.
Abstract
Alterations in the composition of the intestinal microbiome, also known as dysbiosis, are the result of many factors such as diet, antibiotics, stress, diseases, etc. There are currently several ways to modulate intestinal microbiome such as dietary modulation, the use of antimicrobials, prebiotics, probiotics, postbiotics, and synbiotics. Faecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) represents one new method of gut microbiota modulation in humans with the aim of reconstructing the intestinal microbiome of the recipient. In human medicine, this form of bacteriotherapy is successfully used in cases of recurrent Clostridium difficile infection (CDI). FMT has been known in large animal medicine for several years. In small animal medicine, the use of FMT is not part of normal practice.Entities:
Keywords: dogs; faecal microbiota transplantation; gut; microbiome; modulation; probiotics
Year: 2022 PMID: 35629390 PMCID: PMC9146664 DOI: 10.3390/life12050723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Figure 1The diversity of the intestinal microbiota in healthy dogs [14,20]. Each column represents the composition of the microbiota in one healthy dog. Reprinted with permission from Suchodolski J [14].
The beneficial and harmful metabolic pathways of the gut microbiota and their impacts on the host.
| Consequence for Host | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Source | Bacterial Group Involved | Derived Metabolites | Beneficial | Harmful |
| Fermentation to SCFAs (acetate, butyrate, propionate) [ | Anti-inflammatory effect. Maintenance of intestinal barrier function. Motility regulation. Source of energy for epithelial cells [ | Virulence factors of enteropathogen activation (e.g., Salmonella type III secretion system) [ | ||
| In small animals, mainly | Transformation to secondary BAs in colon [ | Anti-inflammatory effect. Growth inhibition ( Modulation of glucose/insulin secretion [ | Secretory diarrhoea caused by lack of In humans, a diet rich in fat, due to increased secondary BAs, represents a high risk of colon cancer [ | |
| Conversion to hydroxystearic acids [ | None [ | Fatty acid diarrhoea [ | ||
| Various [ | Indole metabolites [ | Anti-inflammatory effect. Maintenance of intestinal function [ | Cytotoxic and putrefactive, but only in high concentrations. Indoxyl sulfate acts as a uremic toxin [ | |
| Various [ | P-cresol [ | None [ | Progression of chronic kidney disease similar to uremic toxin [ | |
| Various [ | MPA (mycophenil acids) and acyl glucuronide [ | None [ | Production of proinflammatory cytokines causing diarrhoea [ |
Conditions that can cause intestinal dysbiosis.
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Blind loops Small bowel strictures Surgical resection of the ileo-colic valve Neoplasia Foreign bodies [ |
The decreased production of pancreatic antimicrobial factors. The storage of undigested substrate in lumen leading to SIBO (small intestinal bacterial overgrowth) [ |
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Hypothyroidism Diabetic autonomic neuropathy Scleroderma Abnormal migrating motor complexes [ |
Intestinal inflammation maintains aerobic conditions and changes in pH in the mucosa. The reduction in the mucus layer allows the attachment of bacteria to mucosa [ |
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Atrophic gastritis Administration of acid suppressing drugs (H2-blockers, omeprazole) [ |
Decreased mucosal immunity Antibiotic induced (e.g., tylosin, metronidazole). Diets high in protein and fat and low in fiber (increase |
Consequences of gut dysbiosis.
| Types of Dysbiosis | Consequences |
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Storage of an abnormal substrate in the intestinal lumen (undigested nutrients, medications) [ Disruption of proper microbiome function caused by lack of commensal bacteria ( Increase in the total number of bacteria, primarily in the small intestine [ Increased mucosa- adherent bacteria [ |
Increase in bacterial species, causing osmotic/secretory diarrhoea (conversion of fatty acids to hydroxystearic acids, metabolites of mycophenolate motefil) [ Bacterial overgrowth ( Lack of anti-inflammatory microbial-derived metabolites [ Increased production of microbial metabolites leading to osmotic/secretory diarrhoea. Activation of inflammatory reactions [ Increased adhesion of bacteria to the intestinal mucosa causes increased inflammatory reactions [ |
Reference intervals of abundances of 7 bacterial groups and final DI.
| Normal Abundance | Changes Seen in Dogs with Dysbiosis | |
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| 3.4–8.0 | decreased |
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| 4.6–8.1 | decreased |
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| 1.9–8.0 | increased |
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| 0.9–8.0 | increased |
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| 9.5–11.0 | decreased |
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| 7.0–10.3 | decreased |
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| 5.1–7.1 | decreased |
| Dysbiosis index | <0 normal | [ |
Note: Data expressed logDNA/gram of faeces.
Figure 2A dog with persistent dysbiosis and recurrent After FMT, the dysbiosis index normalized and the abundance of C. hiranonis increased. The dog was subsequently negative for C. difficile [32] From article under the CC BY-NC-ND license, no changes were made.
Types of modulation of the gut microbiota.
| Type of Modulation | Mechanism | Side Effects |
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| A highly digestible diet reduces the storage of undigestible substrate in the intestinal lumen [ | Only in the case of food hypersensitivity or difficult to digest food [ |
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| Production of SCFAs for the growth of beneficial bacteria, binding of deleterious bacterial metabolites (e.g., psyllium has BA- binding properties) [ | Sometimes flatulence, diarrhoea [ |
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| Improvement of barrier function, immunomodulatory and antimicrobial effect [ | Rare [ |
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| Products that contain probiotics and prebiotics. | |
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| Reduction of total bacterial load, suppression of immune stimulation, and conversion of toxic metabolites [ |
Long-term changes in the microbiota composition. Risk of antimicrobial resistance [ |
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| Immunomodulatory, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and anticancer effects [ | Rare [ |
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| Reconstruction microbial composition and some microbial-derived metabolites [ | Diarrhoea, flatulence, bloating, fever, vomiting [ |
Recommended selection criteria for canine faecal donors.
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Age between 1 and 10 years; No travel history outside the local area; No history of chronic GI disease, cancer, allergies, or autoimmune diseases; Healthy state in the last 6–12 months; No antibiotics in the last 12 months; Optimal weight (not overweight or underweight); Fed a balanced diet; Normal faecal consistency; Feeding canine donors with a hydrolyzed diet for several weeks before and during collection is recommended [ |
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No significant changes in the hematology and biochemistry profile; Normal value of pancreatic enzymes, pancreatic immunoreactivity, and trypsin-like immunoreactivity); Optimal serum concentration of cobalamin and folate (= tests of intestinal functions); No presence of endocrinopathy (serum cortisol, thyroxine, TSH concentrations); Negative for faecal parasites; Negative for faecal pathogens ( |
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Faecal dysbiosis index less than 0 [ |
Conditions in which an FMT has potential effects.
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Obesity Diabetes mellitus Metabolic syndrome NAFLD [ Cardiovascular diseases [ |
Rheumatoid arthritis Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura Sjögren’s syndrome Systemic lupus erythematosus Hashimoto |
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Parkinson’s disease Multiple sclerosis Autism Myoclonic dystonia Chronic fatigue syndrome [ |
Atopy Food allergy Asthma [ |
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| Gastrointestinal cancer Gastric cancer Colorectal cancer Hepatocellular carcinoma Pancreatic cancer [ Breast cancer Melanoma Prostate cancer Lymphoma |
Irritable bowel syndrome [ |