Abstract

The gastric microbiome is suspected to have a role in the causation of diseases by Helicobacter pylori. Reports on their relative abundance vis-à-vis H. pylori are available from various ethnic and geographic groups, but little is known about their interaction patterns. Endoscopic mucosal biopsy samples from the gastric antrum and corpus of 39 patients with suspected H. pylori infection were collected and microbiomes were analyzed by 16S rDNA profiling. Four groups of samples were identified, which harbored Helicobacter as well as a diverse group of bacteria including Lactobacillus, Halomonas and Prevotella. There was a negative association between the microbiome diversity and Helicobacter abundance. Network analyses showed that Helicobacter had negative interactions with members of the gastric microbiome, while other microbes interacted positively with each other, showing a higher tendency towards intra-cluster co-occurrence/co-operation. Cross-geographic comparisons suggested the presence of region-specific microbial abundance profiles. We report the microbial diversity, abundance variation and interaction patterns of the gastric microbiota of Indian patients with H. pylori infection and present a comparison of the same with the gastric microbial ecology in samples from different geographic regions. Such microbial abundance profiles and microbial interactions can help in understanding the pathophysiology of gastric ailments and can thus help in development of new strategies to curb it.

Highlights

  • The acidic pH in the stomach lumen impedes bacterial growth[1]

  • While H. pylori has been incriminated in disease, an aspect that has only been recently investigated is the role of the stomach microbiome in the causation of these diseases, especially adenocarcinoma

  • Operational taxonomic unit (OTU)-level profiles of samples were prepared by clustering the sequences into groups having >97% identity

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Summary

Introduction

It is known that the human stomach is not sterile but is rather colonized by diverse microbiota[2]. Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), a Gram-negative bacterium and frequent isolate of stomach specimens, with reported links to the causation of chronic/atrophic gastritis, duodenal ulcers, gastric mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma and adenocarcinoma[2,6,7], has coevolved with its human host. We compared the results with available sequences of the gastric microbiome from different geographic regions. This provided a comprehensive picture of the gastric microbiome in these individuals, and highlighted the association of these groups with Helicobacter abundance

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