Two microbiota subtypes identified in irritable bowel syndrome with distinct responses to the low FODMAP diet.
Authors
Moss, Stephen
Kumar, Nitin
Adoum, Anne
Barne, Meg
Browne, Hilary
Kaser, Arthur
Kiely, Christopher J
Neville, B Anne
Powell, Nina
Stares, Mark D
Zhu, Ana
De La Revilla Negro, Juan
Lawley, Trevor D
Publication Date
2021-11-22Journal Title
Gut
ISSN
0017-5749
Publisher
BMJ
Language
en
Type
Article
This Version
VoR
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Vervier, K., Moss, S., Kumar, N., Adoum, A., Barne, M., Browne, H., Kaser, A., et al. (2021). Two microbiota subtypes identified in irritable bowel syndrome with distinct responses to the low FODMAP diet.. Gut https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2021-325177
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Reducing FODMAPs (fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides and polyols) can be clinically beneficial in IBS but the mechanism is incompletely understood. We aimed to detect microbial signatures that might predict response to the low FODMAP diet and assess whether microbiota compositional and functional shifts could provide insights into its mode of action. DESIGN: We used metagenomics to determine high-resolution taxonomic and functional profiles of the stool microbiota from IBS cases and household controls (n=56 pairs) on their usual diet. Clinical response and microbiota changes were studied in 41 pairs after 4 weeks on a low FODMAP diet. RESULTS: Unsupervised analysis of baseline IBS cases pre-diet identified two distinct microbiota profiles, which we refer to as IBSP (pathogenic-like) and IBSH (health-like) subtypes. IBSP microbiomes were enriched in Firmicutes and genes for amino acid and carbohydrate metabolism, but depleted in Bacteroidetes species. IBSH microbiomes were similar to controls. On the low FODMAP diet, IBSH and control microbiota were unaffected, but the IBSP signature shifted towards a health-associated microbiome with an increase in Bacteroidetes (p=0.009), a decrease in Firmicutes species (p=0.004) and normalisation of primary metabolic genes. The clinical response to the low FODMAP diet was greater in IBSP subjects compared with IBSH (p=0.02). CONCLUSION: 50% of IBS cases manifested a 'pathogenic' gut microbial signature. This shifted towards the healthy profile on the low FODMAP diet; and IBSP cases showed an enhanced clinical responsiveness to the dietary therapy. The effectiveness of FODMAP reduction in IBSP may result from the alterations in gut microbiota and metabolites produced. Microbiota signatures could be useful as biomarkers to guide IBS treatment; and investigating IBSP species and metabolic pathways might yield insights regarding IBS pathogenic mechanisms.
Keywords
Gut microbiota, 1506, 1612, 2312, intestinal microbiology, diet, irritable bowel syndrome
Sponsorship
National Institute for Health Research (NIHRDH-IS-BRC-1215-20014)
Identifiers
gutjnl-2021-325177
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/gutjnl-2021-325177
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/330040
Rights
Embargo: ends 2021-09-28
Licence:
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
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