Abstract

BackgroundDiarrheal diseases continue to contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality in infants and young children in developing countries. There is an urgent need to better understand the contributions of novel, potentially uncultured, diarrheal pathogens to severe diarrheal disease, as well as distortions in normal gut microbiota composition that might facilitate severe disease.ResultsWe use high throughput 16S rRNA gene sequencing to compare fecal microbiota composition in children under five years of age who have been diagnosed with moderate to severe diarrhea (MSD) with the microbiota from diarrhea-free controls. Our study includes 992 children from four low-income countries in West and East Africa, and Southeast Asia. Known pathogens, as well as bacteria currently not considered as important diarrhea-causing pathogens, are positively associated with MSD, and these include Escherichia/Shigella, and Granulicatella species, and Streptococcus mitis/pneumoniae groups. In both cases and controls, there tend to be distinct negative correlations between facultative anaerobic lineages and obligate anaerobic lineages. Overall genus-level microbiota composition exhibit a shift in controls from low to high levels of Prevotella and in MSD cases from high to low levels of Escherichia/Shigella in younger versus older children; however, there was significant variation among many genera by both site and age.ConclusionsOur findings expand the current understanding of microbiota-associated diarrhea pathogenicity in young children from developing countries. Our findings are necessarily based on correlative analyses and must be further validated through epidemiological and molecular techniques.

Highlights

  • Diarrheal diseases continue to contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality in infants and young children in developing countries

  • We have identified statistically significant disease associations with several organisms already implicated in diarrheal disease, such as members of the Escherichia/ Shigella genus and C. jejuni

  • Streptococcal operational taxonomic units (OTUs) associated with disease primarily belong to either the Streptococcus pneumoniae/mitis group, which contains several important human pathogens, or the Streptococcus pasteurianus group

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Diarrheal diseases continue to contribute significantly to morbidity and mortality in infants and young children in developing countries. Diarrheal diseases continue to be major causes of childhood mortality, ranking among the top four largest contributors to years of life lost in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia [1]. In response to important unanswered questions surrounding the burden and etiology of childhood diarrhea in developing countries, the William and Melinda Gates Foundation commissioned the Global Enterics Multicenter Study (GEMS) [4], which recently reported the pathogens responsible for cases of moderate-to-severe diarrhea (MSD) in seven impoverished countries of sub-Saharan Africa and south Asia. For approximately 60% of MSD cases in GEMS, no known pathogen could be implicated by conventional diagnostic methods [5] These observations highlight the potential presence of previously undiscovered pathogens, and/or possible interactions between pathogens and other members of the intestinal microbiota (both pathogenic and commensal) that may either exacerbate the clinical manifestation or protect the host from disease

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call