Diarrhea in young children from low-income countries leads to large-scale alterations in intestinal microbiota composition

Mihai Pop, Alan W. Walker, Hector Corrada Bravo, Richard Rance, Mark Stares, Myron M. Levine, Sandra Panchalingam, Karen Kotloff, Usman N. Ikumapayi, Chinelo Ebruke, Mitchell Adeyemi, Dilruba Ahmed, Joseph Paulson, Firoz Ahmed, Meer Taifur Alam, Ruhul Amin, Sabbir Siddiqui, John B. Ochieng, Emmanuel Ouma, Jane JumaEuince Mailu, Richard Omore, J. Glenn Morris, Brianna Lindsay, Robert F. Breiman, Debasish Saha, Julian Parkhill, James P. Nataro, O. Colin Stine, Martin Antonio, M. Anowar Hossain, Joseph Oundo, Boubou Tamboura, Volker Mai, Irina Astrovskaya

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

181 Citations (Scopus)
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Abstract

Background: Diarrheal diseases continue to contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality in infants and young children in developing countries. There is an urgent need to better understand the contributions of novel, potentially uncultured, diarrheal pathogens to severe diarrheal disease, as well as distortions in normal gut microbiota composition that might facilitate severe disease. Results: We use high throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing to compare fecal microbiota composition in children under five years of age who have been diagnosed with moderate to severe diarrhea (MSD) with the microbiota from diarrhea-free controls. Our study includes 992 children from four low-income countries in West and East Africa, and Southeast Asia. Known pathogens, as well as bacteria currently not considered as important diarrhea-causing pathogens, are positively associated with MSD, and these include Escherichia/Shigella, and Granulicatella species, and Streptococcus mitis/pneumoniae groups. In both cases and controls, there tend to be distinct negative correlations between facultative anaerobic lineages and obligate anaerobic lineages. Overall genus-level microbiota composition exhibit a shift in controls from low to high levels of Prevotella and in MSD cases from high to low levels of Escherichia/Shigella in younger versus older children; however, there was significant variation among many genera by both site and age. Conclusions: Our findings expand the current understanding of microbiota-associated diarrhea pathogenicity in young children from developing countries. Our findings are necessarily based on correlative analyses and must be further validated through epidemiological and molecular techniques.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberR76
Pages (from-to)1-12
Number of pages12
JournalGenome Biology
Volume15
Issue number6
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Copyright the Author(s) 2014. Version archived for private and non-commercial use with the permission of the author/s and according to publisher conditions. For further rights please contact the publisher.

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