Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity

Abstract Background Gut microbiota has been increasingly acknowledged to shape significantly human health, contributing to various autoimmune diseases, both intestinal and non-intestinal, including multiple sclerosis (MS). Gut microbiota studies in patients with relapsing remitting MS strongly sugge...

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Main Authors: Madina Kozhieva, Natalia Naumova, Tatiana Alikina, Alexey Boyko, Valentin Vlassov, Marsel R. Kabilov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-12-01
Series:BMC Microbiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-019-1685-2
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spelling doaj-0efac9e4ae224bc180a9f07de929f54f2021-01-03T12:09:08ZengBMCBMC Microbiology1471-21802019-12-011911910.1186/s12866-019-1685-2Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversityMadina Kozhieva0Natalia Naumova1Tatiana Alikina2Alexey Boyko3Valentin Vlassov4Marsel R. Kabilov5Department of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Medical Genetics of the Pirogov Medical UniversityInstitute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine SB RASInstitute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine SB RASDepartment of Neurology, Neurosurgery and Medical Genetics of the Pirogov Medical UniversityInstitute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine SB RASInstitute of Chemical Biology and Fundamental Medicine SB RASAbstract Background Gut microbiota has been increasingly acknowledged to shape significantly human health, contributing to various autoimmune diseases, both intestinal and non-intestinal, including multiple sclerosis (MS). Gut microbiota studies in patients with relapsing remitting MS strongly suggested its possible role in immunoregulation; however, the profile and potential of gut microbiota involvement in patients with primary progressive MS (PPMS) patients has received much less attention due to the rarity of this disease form. We compared the composition and structure of faecal bacterial assemblage using Illumina MiSeq sequencing of V3-V4 hypervariable region of 16S rRNA genes amplicons in patients with primary progressive MS and in the healthy controls. Results Over all samples 12 bacterial phyla were identified, containing 21 classes, 25 orders, 54 families, 174 genera and 1256 operational taxonomic units (OTUs). The Firmicutes phylum was found to be ultimately dominating both in OTUs richness (68% of the total bacterial OTU number) and in abundance (71% of the total number of sequence reads), followed by Bacteroidetes (12 and 16%, resp.) and Actinobacteria (7 and 6%, resp.). Summarily in all samples the number of dominant OTUs, i.e. OTUs with ≥1% relative abundance, was 13, representing much less taxonomic richness (three phyla, three classes, four orders, six families and twelve genera) as compared to the total list of identified OTUs and accounting for 30% of the sequence reads number in the healthy cohort and for 23% in the PPMS cohort. Human faecal bacterial diversity profiles were found to differ between PPMS and healthy cohorts at different taxonomic levels in minor or rare taxa. Marked PPMS-associated increase was found in the relative abundance of two dominant OTUs (Gemmiger sp. and an unclassified Ruminococcaceae). The MS-related differences were also found at the level of minor and rare OTUs (101 OTUs). These changes in OTUs’ abundance translated into increased bacterial assemblage diversity in patients. Conclusion The findings are important for constructing a more detailed global picture of the primary progressive MS-associated gut microbiota, contributing to better understanding of the disease pathogenesis.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-019-1685-2Multiple sclerosisPrimary progressive courseHumansFaecal bacterial assemblage16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Madina Kozhieva
Natalia Naumova
Tatiana Alikina
Alexey Boyko
Valentin Vlassov
Marsel R. Kabilov
spellingShingle Madina Kozhieva
Natalia Naumova
Tatiana Alikina
Alexey Boyko
Valentin Vlassov
Marsel R. Kabilov
Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
BMC Microbiology
Multiple sclerosis
Primary progressive course
Humans
Faecal bacterial assemblage
16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing
author_facet Madina Kozhieva
Natalia Naumova
Tatiana Alikina
Alexey Boyko
Valentin Vlassov
Marsel R. Kabilov
author_sort Madina Kozhieva
title Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
title_short Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
title_full Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
title_fullStr Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
title_full_unstemmed Primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a Russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
title_sort primary progressive multiple sclerosis in a russian cohort: relationship with gut bacterial diversity
publisher BMC
series BMC Microbiology
issn 1471-2180
publishDate 2019-12-01
description Abstract Background Gut microbiota has been increasingly acknowledged to shape significantly human health, contributing to various autoimmune diseases, both intestinal and non-intestinal, including multiple sclerosis (MS). Gut microbiota studies in patients with relapsing remitting MS strongly suggested its possible role in immunoregulation; however, the profile and potential of gut microbiota involvement in patients with primary progressive MS (PPMS) patients has received much less attention due to the rarity of this disease form. We compared the composition and structure of faecal bacterial assemblage using Illumina MiSeq sequencing of V3-V4 hypervariable region of 16S rRNA genes amplicons in patients with primary progressive MS and in the healthy controls. Results Over all samples 12 bacterial phyla were identified, containing 21 classes, 25 orders, 54 families, 174 genera and 1256 operational taxonomic units (OTUs). The Firmicutes phylum was found to be ultimately dominating both in OTUs richness (68% of the total bacterial OTU number) and in abundance (71% of the total number of sequence reads), followed by Bacteroidetes (12 and 16%, resp.) and Actinobacteria (7 and 6%, resp.). Summarily in all samples the number of dominant OTUs, i.e. OTUs with ≥1% relative abundance, was 13, representing much less taxonomic richness (three phyla, three classes, four orders, six families and twelve genera) as compared to the total list of identified OTUs and accounting for 30% of the sequence reads number in the healthy cohort and for 23% in the PPMS cohort. Human faecal bacterial diversity profiles were found to differ between PPMS and healthy cohorts at different taxonomic levels in minor or rare taxa. Marked PPMS-associated increase was found in the relative abundance of two dominant OTUs (Gemmiger sp. and an unclassified Ruminococcaceae). The MS-related differences were also found at the level of minor and rare OTUs (101 OTUs). These changes in OTUs’ abundance translated into increased bacterial assemblage diversity in patients. Conclusion The findings are important for constructing a more detailed global picture of the primary progressive MS-associated gut microbiota, contributing to better understanding of the disease pathogenesis.
topic Multiple sclerosis
Primary progressive course
Humans
Faecal bacterial assemblage
16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12866-019-1685-2
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