中文版 | English
Title

Strain-Level Dynamics Reveal Regulatory Roles in Atopic Eczema by Gut Bacterial Phages

Author
Corresponding AuthorKang, Yu
Publication Years
2023-03-01
DOI
Source Title
ISSN
2165-0497
Abstract
["The vast population of bacterial phages or viruses (virome) plays pivotal roles in the ecology of human microbial flora and health conditions. Obstacles, including poor viral sequence inference, strain-sensitive virus-host relationship, and the high diversity among individuals, hinder the in-depth understanding of the human virome. We conducted longitudinal studies of the virome based on constructing a high-quality personal reference metagenome (PRM). By applying long-read sequencing for representative samples, we could build a PRM of high continuity that allows accurate annotation and abundance estimation of viruses and bacterial species in all samples of the same individual by aligning short sequencing reads to the PRM. We applied this approach to a series of fecal samples collected for 6 months from a 2-year-old boy who had experienced a 2-month flare-up of atopic eczema (dermatitis) in this period. We identified 31 viral strains in the patient's gut microbiota and deciphered their strain-level relationship to their bacterial hosts. Among them, a lytic crAssphage developed into a dozen substrains and coordinated downregulation in the catabolism of aromatic amino acids (AAAs) in their host bacteria which govern the production of immune-active AAA derivates. The metabolic alterations confirmed based on metabolomic assays cooccurred with symptom remission. Our PRM-based analysis provides an easy approach for deciphering the dynamics of the strain-level human gut virome in the context of entire microbiota. Close temporal correlations among virome alteration, microbial metabolism, and disease remission suggest a potential mechanism for how bacterial phages in microbiota are intimately related to human health.IMPORTANCE The vast populations of viruses or bacteriophages in human gut flora remain mysterious. However, poor annotation and abundance estimation remain obstacles to strain-level analysis and clarification of their roles in microbiome ecology and metabolism associated with human health and diseases. We demonstrate that a personal reference metagenome (PRM)-based approach provides strain-level resolution for analyzing the gut microbiota-associated virome. When applying such an approach to longitudinal samples collected from a 2-year-old boy who has experienced a 2-month flare-up of atopic eczema, we observed thriving substrains of a lytic crAssphage, showing temporal correlation with downregulated catabolism of aromatic amino acids, lower production of immune-active metabolites, and remission of the disease. The PRM-based approach is practical and powerful for strain-centric analysis of the human gut virome, and the underlying mechanism of how strain-level virome dynamics affect disease deserves further investigation.","The vast populations of viruses or bacteriophages in human gut flora remain mysterious. However, poor annotation and abundance estimation remain obstacles to strain-level analysis and clarification of their roles in microbiome ecology and metabolism associated with human health and diseases."]
Keywords
URL[Source Record]
Indexed By
Language
English
SUSTech Authorship
Others
Funding Project
National Key Research and Development Program of China[2021YFC2301000]
WOS Research Area
Microbiology
WOS Subject
Microbiology
WOS Accession No
WOS:000951559400001
Publisher
Data Source
Web of Science
Citation statistics
Cited Times [WOS]:0
Document TypeJournal Article
Identifierhttp://kc.sustech.edu.cn/handle/2SGJ60CL/523911
DepartmentSchool of Medicine
Affiliation
1.Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing Inst Genom, China Natl Ctr Bioinformat, Beijing, Peoples R China
2.Southern Univ Sci & Technol, Sch Med, Shenzhen, Peoples R China
3.Univ Chinese Acad Sci, Beijing, Peoples R China
4.Peking Univ Third Hosp, Dept Pediat, Beijing, Peoples R China
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Chu, Yanan,Meng, Qingren,Yu, Jun,et al. Strain-Level Dynamics Reveal Regulatory Roles in Atopic Eczema by Gut Bacterial Phages[J]. MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM,2023.
APA
Chu, Yanan,Meng, Qingren,Yu, Jun,Zhang, Juan,Chen, Jing,&Kang, Yu.(2023).Strain-Level Dynamics Reveal Regulatory Roles in Atopic Eczema by Gut Bacterial Phages.MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM.
MLA
Chu, Yanan,et al."Strain-Level Dynamics Reveal Regulatory Roles in Atopic Eczema by Gut Bacterial Phages".MICROBIOLOGY SPECTRUM (2023).
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