Multi-omic Analysis of the Interaction between Clostridioides difficile Infection and Pediatric Inflammatory Bowel Disease

艰难梭菌感染与儿童炎症性肠病相互作用的多组学分析

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作者:Frederic D Bushman ,Maire Conrad ,Yue Ren ,Chunyu Zhao ,Christopher Gu ,Christopher Petucci ,Min-Soo Kim ,Arwa Abbas ,Kevin J Downes ,Nina Devas ,Lisa M Mattei ,Jessica Breton ,Judith Kelsen ,Sarah Marakos ,Alissa Galgano ,Kelly Kachelries ,Jessi Erlichman ,Jessica L Hart ,Michael Moraskie ,Dorothy Kim ,Huanjia Zhang ,Casey E Hofstaedter ,Gary D Wu ,James D Lewis ,Joseph P Zackular ,Hongzhe Li ,Kyle Bittinger ,Robert Baldassano

Abstract

Children with inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are particularly vulnerable to infection with Clostridioides difficile (CDI). IBD and IBD + CDI have overlapping symptoms but respond to distinctive treatments, highlighting the need for diagnostic biomarkers. Here, we studied pediatric patients with IBD and IBD + CDI, comparing longitudinal data on the gut microbiome, metabolome, and other measures. The microbiome is dysbiotic and heterogeneous in both disease states, but the metabolome reveals disease-specific patterns. The IBD group shows increased concentrations of markers of inflammation and tissue damage compared with healthy controls, and metabolic changes associate with susceptibility to CDI. In IBD + CDI, we detect both metabolites associated with inflammation/tissue damage and fermentation products produced by C. difficile. The most discriminating metabolite found is isocaproyltaurine, a covalent conjugate of a distinctive C. difficile fermentation product (isocaproate) and an amino acid associated with tissue damage (taurine), which may be useful as a joint marker of the two disease processes. Keywords: Clostridioides difficile; Gram-positive; inflammatory bowel disease; isocaproate; isocaproyltaurine; metabolome; microbiome; taurine.

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