1. The phageome of patients with ulcerative colitis treated with donor fecal microbiota reveals markers associated with disease remission.
- Author
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Majzoub ME, Paramsothy S, Haifer C, Parthasarathy R, Borody TJ, Leong RW, Kamm MA, and Kaakoush NO
- Subjects
- Humans, Double-Blind Method, Male, Female, Metagenomics methods, Adult, Dysbiosis microbiology, Dysbiosis therapy, Middle Aged, Virome genetics, Remission Induction, Anti-Bacterial Agents therapeutic use, Biomarkers, Colitis, Ulcerative therapy, Colitis, Ulcerative microbiology, Colitis, Ulcerative virology, Fecal Microbiota Transplantation, Bacteriophages genetics, Bacteriophages isolation & purification, Bacteriophages physiology, Gastrointestinal Microbiome genetics, Feces microbiology, Feces virology
- Abstract
Bacteriophages are influential within the human gut microbiota, yet they remain understudied relative to bacteria. This is a limitation of studies on fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) where bacteriophages likely influence outcome. Here, using metagenomics, we profile phage populations - the phageome - in individuals recruited into two double-blind randomized trials of FMT in ulcerative colitis. We leverage the trial designs to observe that phage populations behave similarly to bacterial populations, showing temporal stability in health, dysbiosis in active disease, modulation by antibiotic treatment and by FMT. We identify a donor bacteriophage putatively associated with disease remission, which on genomic analysis was found integrated in a bacterium classified to Oscillospiraceae, previously isolated from a centenarian and predicted to produce vitamin B complex except B12. Our study provides an in-depth assessment of phage populations during different states and suggests that bacteriophage tracking has utility in identifying determinants of disease activity and resolution., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2024
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