Bacteriophages Isolated from Stunted Children Can Regulate Gut Bacterial Communities in an Age-Specific Manner

从发育迟缓儿童中分离出的噬菌体可以以年龄特异性的方式调节肠道细菌群落

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作者:Mohammadali Khan Mirzaei, Md Anik Ashfaq Khan, Prakash Ghosh, Zofia E Taranu, Mariia Taguer, Jinlong Ru, Rajashree Chowdhury, Md Mamun Kabir, Li Deng, Dinesh Mondal, Corinne F Maurice

Abstract

Stunting, a severe and multigenerational growth impairment, globally affects 22% of children under the age of 5 years. Stunted children have altered gut bacterial communities with higher proportions of Proteobacteria, a phylum with several known human pathogens. Despite the links between an altered gut microbiota and stunting, the role of bacteriophages, highly abundant bacterial viruses, is unknown. Here, we describe the gut bacterial and bacteriophage communities of Bangladeshi stunted children younger than 38 months. We show that these children harbor distinct gut bacteriophages relative to their non-stunted counterparts. In vitro, these gut bacteriophages are infectious and can regulate bacterial abundance and composition in an age-specific manner, highlighting their possible role in the pathophysiology of child stunting. Specifically, Proteobacteria from non-stunted children increased in the presence of phages from younger stunted children, suggesting that phages could contribute to the bacterial community changes observed in child stunting.

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