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Long-term taxonomic and functional divergence from donor bacterial strains following fecal microbiota transplantation in immunocompromised patients

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2017

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Public Library of Science
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Moss, Eli L., Shannon B. Falconer, Ekaterina Tkachenko, Mingjie Wang, Hannah Systrom, Jasmin Mahabamunuge, David A. Relman, Elizabeth L. Hohmann, and Ami S. Bhatt. 2017. “Long-term taxonomic and functional divergence from donor bacterial strains following fecal microbiota transplantation in immunocompromised patients.” PLoS ONE 12 (8): e0182585. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0182585. http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0182585.

Abstract

Immunocompromised individuals are at high risk of developing Clostridium difficile-associated disease (CDAD). Fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) is a highly effective therapy for refractory or recurrent CDAD and, despite safety concerns, has recently been offered to immunocompromised patients. We investigated the genomics of bacterial composition following FMT in immunocompromised patients over a 1-year period. Metagenomic, strain and gene-level bacterial dynamics were characterized in two CDAD-affected hematopoietic stem cell (HCT) recipients following FMT. We found alterations in gene content, including loss of virulence and antibiotic resistance genes. These alterations were accompanied by long-term bacterial divergence at the species and strain levels. Our findings suggest limited durability of the specific bacterial consortium introduced with FMT and indicate that alterations of the functional potential of the microbiome are more complex than can be inferred by taxonomic information alone. Our observation that FMT alone cannot induce long-term donor-like alterations of the microbiota of HCT recipients suggests that FMT cannot indefinitely supersede environmental and/or host factors in shaping bacterial composition.

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Biology and Life Sciences, Microbiology, Microbial Control, Antimicrobial Resistance, Antibiotic Resistance, Medicine and Health Sciences, Pharmacology, Medical Microbiology, Microbiome, Genetics, Genomics, Microbial Genomics, Metagenomics, Taxonomy, Microbial Taxonomy, Computer and Information Sciences, Data Management, Drugs, Antimicrobials, Antibiotics, Biology and life sciences, Molecular biology, Molecular biology techniques, Cloning, DNA cloning, Shotgun Sequencing, Molecular Biology, Molecular Biology Techniques, Sequencing Techniques, Bacteriology, Bacterial Taxonomy, Database and Informatics Methods, Bioinformatics, Sequence Analysis, Sequence Alignment

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