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Low diversity gut microbiota dysbiosis: drivers, functional implications and recovery

Authors :
Michael Kriss
Catherine A. Lozupone
Keith Z. Hazleton
Nichole M. Nusbacher
Casey G. Martin
Source :
Current Opinion in Microbiology. 44:34-40
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2018.

Abstract

Dysbiosis, an imbalance in microbial communities, is linked with disease when this imbalance disturbs microbiota functions essential for maintaining health or introduces processes that promote disease. Dysbiosis in disease is predicted when microbiota differ compositionally from a healthy control population, but only truly defined when these differences are mechanistically related to adverse phenotypes. For the human gut microbiota, dysbiosis varies across diseases. One common manifestation is replacement of the complex community of anaerobes typical of the healthy adult gut microbiome with a community of lower overall microbial diversity and increased facultative anaerobes. Here we review diseases in which low-diversity dysbiosis has been observed and mechanistically linked with disease, with a particular focus on liver disease, inflammatory bowel disease, and Clostridium difficile infection.

Details

ISSN :
13695274
Volume :
44
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Current Opinion in Microbiology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....305a5cf1695074df95df3236e8c1a74c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mib.2018.07.003