Dysbiosis of the Duodenal Mucosal Microbiota Is Associated With Increased Small Intestinal Permeability in Chronic Liver Disease
Date
Authors
Raj, Ashok S.
Shanahan, Erin R.
Tran, Cuong
Bhat, Purnima
Fletcher, L M
Vesey, David A.
Morrison, M
Holtmann, G
Macdonald, Graeme
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Chronic liver disease (CLD) is associated with both alterations of the stool microbiota and increased
small intestinal permeability. However, little is known about the role of the small intestinal mucosaassociated
microbiota (MAM) in CLD. The aim of this study was to evaluate the relationship between the
duodenal MAM and both small intestinal permeability and liver disease severity in CLD.
METHODS: Subjects with CLD and a disease-free control group undergoing routine endoscopy underwent duodenal
biopsy to assess duodenal MAM by 16S rRNA gene sequencing. Small intestinal permeability was
assessed by a dual sugar (lactulose: rhamnose) assay. Other assessments included transient
elastography, endotoxemia, serum markers of hepatic inflammation, dietary intake, and
anthropometric measurements.
RESULTS: Forty-six subjects (35 with CLD and 11 controls) were assessed. In subjects with CLD, the composition
(P 5 0.02) and diversity (P < 0.01) of the duodenal MAM differed to controls. Constrained multivariate
analysis and linear discriminate effect size showed this was due to Streptococcus-affiliated lineages.
Small intestinal permeability was significantly higher in CLD subjects compared to controls. In CLD,
there were inverse correlations between microbial diversity and both increased small intestinal
permeability (r 5 20.41, P 5 0.02) and serum alanine aminotransferase (r 5 20.35, P 5 0.04).
Hepatic stiffness was not associated with the MAM.
DISCUSSION: In CLD, there is dysbiosis of the duodenal MAM and an inverse correlation between microbial diversity
and small intestinal permeability.
TRANSLATIONAL
IMPACT:
Strategies to ameliorate duodenal MAM dysbiosis may ameliorate intestinal barrier dysfunction and
liver injury in CLD.
Description
Keywords
Citation
Collections
Source
Clinical and Translational Gastroenterology
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Access Statement
Open Access
License Rights
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs License