Web of Science: 7 citations, Scopus: 7 citations, Google Scholar: citations,
Characterization of the Fecal and Mucosa-Associated Microbiota in Dogs with Chronic Inflammatory Enteropathy
Díaz-Regañón, David (Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía Animal)
García-Sancho, Mercedes (Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía Animal)
Villaescusa, Alejandra (Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía Animal)
Sainz Rodríguez, Ángel (Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía Animal)
Agulla, Beatriz (Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona. Departament de Medicina i Cirurgia Animals)
Reyes-Prieto, Mariana (Foundation for the Promotion of Sanitary and Biomedical Research of the Valencian Community)
Rodríguez-Bertos, Antonio (Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Centro de Vigilancia Sanitaria Veterinaria)
Rodríguez Franco, Fernando (Universidad Complutense de Madrid. Departamento de Medicina y Cirugía Animal)

Date: 2023
Abstract: Chronic inflammatory enteropathies are the most common cause of chronic vomiting and diarrhea in dogs. The pathogenesis of this disease is known to be multifactorial, where intestinal barrier dysfunction, immunological dysregulation and gut microbiota changes play a central role. Most sequencing studies assessing the intestinal microbiota in canine species have been made to evaluate fecal samples. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to characterize the intestinal bacterial microbiota from duodenal biopsies and fecal samples in dogs with inflammatory bowel disease at the diagnosis time and to compare it to healthy dogs. Our study results demonstrate that dogs with inflammatory bowel disease have significantly different gut microbiota when compared to healthy control dogs, but these changes are more obvious in the fecal microbiota rather than in the duodenal mucosal-associated one. Further investigations including functionality approaches targeting the gut microbiome at both levels are warranted. Canine chronic inflammatory enteropathy implicates multifactorial pathogenesis where immunological dysregulation and gut microbiota changes have a central role. Most sequencing-based taxonomic studies have been focused on the fecal microbiota. However, the analysis of these samples does not provide complete information regarding the composition of the small intestine affected by this canine disease. Therefore, in this study, we aimed to characterize the intestinal bacterial microbiota in dogs with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) (n = 34) by means of duodenal biopsies and fecal samples collected at the time of the diagnosis and to compare those to a group of healthy dogs (n = 12) using the 16S ribosomal RNA (16S rRNA) gene-targeted sequencing (Illumina MiSeq platform). Our study showed that IBD dogs presented differences in the fecal bacterial communities when compared with healthy dogs, with a lower relative abundance of Prevotellaceae (p = 0. 005), Prevotella (p = 0. 002), and Prevotellaceae Ga6A1 group (0. 006); Erysipelotrichales (p = 0. 019), Candidatus Stoquefichus (p < 0. 001), Erysipelotrichaceae (p = 0. 011), and Allobaculum (p = 0. 003); Lachnospiraceae NK4A136 group (p = 0. 015), Sellimonas (p = 0. 042), Oscillospirales (p = 0. 037), Oscillospiraceae UCG-005 (p < 0. 001), Faecalibacterium (p = 0. 028), and Fournierella (p = 0. 034); Acidaminococcales, Acidaminococcaceae, and Phascolarctobacterium (p = 0. 001); Aeromonadales (p = 0. 026), Succinivibrionaceae (p = 0. 037), and Succinivibrio (p = 0. 031). On the other hand, a higher relative abundance of Enterococcaceae (Enterococcus ; p = 0. 003), Streptococcaceae (Streptococcus, p = 0. 021), Enterobacterales (p = 0. 027), Enterobacteriaceae (p = 0. 008), and Escherichia-Shigella (p = 0. 011) was detected. Moreover, when evaluating α-diversity, the dogs with IBD showed lower diversity in terms of richness and abundance of species (observed species [ p = 0. 031] and Shannon index [ p = 0. 039]). Furthermore, fecal microbiota in dogs with IBD was significantly different from healthy dogs (p = 0. 006). However, only a few taxa relative abundance shifts (lower Rubrobacteria, Rubrobacterales, Rubrobacteriaceae, and Rubrobacter [ p = 0. 002]; Cyanobacteria [ p = 0. 010], Vampirivibrionia, Obscuribacterales, and Obscuribacteraceae [ p = 0. 005]; Neisseriaceae [ p = 0. 004] and Conchiformibius [ p = 0. 003]) were observed when assessing duodenal-associated microbiota of dogs with IBD. Thus, even if the bowel inflammation mainly affects the small intestine in the IBD-affected dogs of the study, fecal specimens may constitute a better sample due not only to their easy availability but also in terms of searching for bacterial taxa as biomarkers for canine IBD. The use of different diets in the study can also have a partial influence on the microbiota composition. Future studies encompassing multi-omics approaches should evaluate the functionality in both levels to unravel the pathophysiology of canine IBD.
Note: Altres ajuts: Universidad Complutense de Madrid PR41/17-21023, PR 75/18-21623 i PR 87/19-22606
Rights: Aquest document està subjecte a una llicència d'ús Creative Commons. Es permet la reproducció total o parcial, la distribució, la comunicació pública de l'obra i la creació d'obres derivades, fins i tot amb finalitats comercials, sempre i quan es reconegui l'autoria de l'obra original. Creative Commons
Language: Anglès
Document: Article ; recerca ; Versió publicada
Subject: Dog ; IBD ; Chronic enteropathy ; Gut microbiota ; Bacterial diversity ; Bacterial composition ; 16S rRNA
Published in: Animals, Vol. 13 (january 2023) , ISSN 2076-2615

DOI: 10.3390/ani13030326
PMID: 36766216


22 p, 1.4 MB

The record appears in these collections:
Articles > Research articles
Articles > Published articles

 Record created 2023-03-03, last modified 2023-06-30



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