Topic Highlight
Copyright ©2014 Baishideng Publishing Group Inc.
World J Gastroenterol. Jul 21, 2014; 20(27): 8821-8836
Published online Jul 21, 2014. doi: 10.3748/wjg.v20.i27.8821
Table 1 Outcomes of the selected original research studies (see text for details), which have been carried out to characterize the intestinal microbiota composition in irritable bowel syndrome
ParticipantsRome criteriaResultsSampleTechniqueRef.
27 IBS (20 F/7 M)IIFecalqPCR (SYBR Green)[16]
12 IBS-DRuminococcus productus - Clostridium coccoides
9 IBS-CLactobacillus (IBS-D vs IBS-C)
6 IBS-ABifidobacterium (IBS-D vs HC, IBD-C, IBS-A)
Age: 20-65Desulfovibrio (IBS-D vs HC, IBD-C, IBS-A)
22 HCs (15 F/7 M)Veillonella (IBS-C vs HC)
Age: 25-64
26 IBS (19 F/7 M)IIFecesDGGE[23]
12 IBS-DMore temporal instability in predominant bacterial population in IBS subjects
9 IBS-CSlight increase of coliforms in IBS and higher aerobe/anaerobe ratio in IBSCloning and sequencing of 5 IBS and 4 HC samples (29 IBS and 16 HC clones); ABI PRISM BigDye terminator Cycle sequencing kit v. 3.0
5 IBS-AClostridium spp.
Age: 20-65Eubacterium spp.
25 HCs (18 F/7 M)
Age: 23-63Culture method
20 IBS (14 F/6 M)IIIleal andFISH[33]
Mean age: 47.8Mucosal bacteria concentration higher than 109 cells/mL in 65% of IBS subjects (35% in HC)colonic biopsies
20 HCs (13 F/7 M)Prevalence of Eubacterium rectale-Clostridium coccoides in IBS biofilm
Mean age: 46.2
16 IBS (11 F/5 M)IIMore temporal instability of predominant microbiota only in RNA-DGGE profiles in IBS vs HCs (not in DNA-DGGE)FecesDGGE[49]
7 IBS-D
6 IBS-C
3 IBS-AC. coccoides - E. rectale in IBS-C vs HC No differences in Clostridium population stability between IBS and HCMultiplexed quantification of clostridial 16S rRNA through multiple transcript analysis with the aid of affinity capture (TRAC)
Age: 24-64
16 HCs (12 F/4 M)
Age: 26-63
24 IBSIISignificant differences in microbiota composition in different IBS subcategories pooled in 3 groups on the basis of %GC (7-10-13 fractions)Feces16S rRNA gene cloning and sequencing of 3753 clones[37]
10 IBS-D
8 IBS-C
In fraction group 7:
6 IBS-ALactobacillus in all IBS subgroups vs HC
Age: 21-65Ruminococcus in IBS-C and IBS-A
23 HCs (16 F/7 M)Streptococcus in IBS-D
Age: 26-64
In fraction group 13:
Collinsella in IBS-C and IBS-D
20 IBSIIClostridium thermosuccinogenes (IBS-A vs IBS-D)FecesqPCR (SYBR Green)[46]
8 IBS-DRuminococcus torques 94% phylotype (IBS-D vs HCs and IBS-A)
8 IBS-CRuminococcus bromii-like phylotype (IBS-C vs HCs)
4 IBS-ABacteroides intestinalis-like and C. cocleatum (IBS-A and HCs vs IBS-D)
Age: 24-64Clostridium aerofaciens-like (IBS-D vs other groups)
15 HCs
Age: 25-64
41 IBS (29 F/12 M)BifidobacteriumFecesFISH[31]
14 IBS-DB. catenulatumFeces and duodenal brushesqPCR (Taqman)
11 IBS-C
16 IBS-A
Mean age: 42
26 HCs (18 F/8 M)
Mean age:32
10 IBS-D (6 F/4 M)IIDecreased diversity in the intestinal microbiota of IBS-D vs HCs ↑ Proteobacteria and Firmicutes ↑ Lachnospiraceae ↓ Actinobacteria and BacteroidetesFecesGenomic DNA fractioning on the basis of %GC (35%-40%/40%-45%/50%-55%/55%-60%/60-65/65%-70%/70%-75%); amplification of 16S rRNA gene; sequencing of 3267 clones for IBS subjects[47]
Age average: 46.5
23 HCs
Age average: 45
12 IBS-D (7 F/5 M)No significant differences in Enterobacteriaceae and Eggerthella lenta-type (Atopobium) phylotype between IBS-D and HCsqPCR (SYBR Green)
Age average: 46.5
22 HCs
Age average: 45
47 IBS (47 F)IISignificant difference in DGGE profile between IBS and HC, less microbial variation in IBSFecesDGGE of V1-V3 region of the 16S rRNA[70]
Age: 24-66
33 HCsNo significant intra and inter-differences in IBS subjects between luminal and mucosal microbiota. IBS impacts equally on both communitiesFeces and colonic biopsiesDGGE of V6-V8 Region of the16S rRNA
Age: 21-38
26 IBS (13 F/13 M)VeillonellaFecesqPCR (SYBR Green)[12]
8 IBS-D
11 IBS-CLactobacillus spp.Culture method
7 IBS-A
Age: 21.7 ± 2.0
26 HCs
Age: 21.9 ± 2.9
10 IBS-D (8 F/2 M)III↓ Aerobic counts in fecal samples of IBS-DFeces samples and colonic biopsyCulture method[27]
Age: 23-50No difference in mucosal samples between IBS-D and HC
10 HCs (6 F/4 M)Lactobacillus spp. in fecal samples of IBS-D vs HC
Age: 21-54No difference in mucosal samples between IBS-D and HCqPCR (SYBR Green)
11 IBS (7 F/4 M)IIReduced biodiversity in IBS subjectsFecesDGGE on universal and specific primers for Bacteroides Sequencing of V3 region of the 16S rRNA genes[69]
Age: 25-64Significant differences in profiles between IBS and HC subjects
22 HCs (17 F/5 M)B. vulgatus, B. ovatus, B. uniformis, Parabacteroides
Age: 21-61sp. in IBS vs HC
22 IBS (8 F/14 M)Pediatric Rome IIINo differences in total bacterial load between IBS and HCsFeces16S Metagenomics 454 Pyrosequencing (V1-V3 and V3-V5 regions of 16S rRNA)[35]
1 IBS-DProfile differences in IBS subtypes among each other, and between IBS and HCs
13 IBS-CIn IBS:
8 IBS-A↑ Proteobacteria
Age: 7-12↑γ-Proteobacteria
22 HCs (11 F/11 M)Haemophilus parainfluenzae
VeillonellaPhyloChip Microarray Hybridization on purified 27F and 1492R regions of 16S rRNA (on 28 IBS and 27 HC)
Dorea
Eubacterium
Anaerovorax
Bacteroides vulgatus
62 IBS (57 F/5 M)II↑ Firmicutes/Bacteroidetes ratioFecesHITChip phylogenetic microarray[36]
25 IBS-DBacillus
19 IBS-CSteptococcus
19 IBS-ADorea
Age: 22-66Ruminococcus
46 HCs (34 F/12 M)R. gnavus
Age: 23-58Blautia
Clostridium
Faecalibacterium
Bacteroides
B. vulgatus
Prevotella
Bifidobacterium
B. gallicum
B. pseudocatenulatum
Methanobrevibacter in IBS vs HC, particularly in IBS-C subgroup
11 IBSIIGreater biological variability of predominant bacteria among IBS subjects vs HC and higher microbial diversity (especially Bacteroides and lactobacilli) in IBS vs HCFecesqPCR (SYBR Green)[63]
(5 F/6 M)In IBS, Exclusive detection of Eubacterium biforme (absent in HC)DGGE on V3-V5 region of 16S rRNA gene
8 HCs (2 F/6 M)BacteroidetesqPCR (SYBR Green)
Age: 18-74Lactobacillus
Bifidobacterium
C. coccoides
37 IBS (26 F/11 M)IINo evident difference in predominant microbiota from profiles of both sample sites between IBS and HCDuodenal brushes and fecesDGGE on V6-V8 region of 16S rRNA gene, generation of 51 clones and sequencing[57]
13 IBS-D
13 IBS-C
13 IBS-AP. aeruginosa in all subgroups if IBS and in bothqPCR (Taqman)
Age: 21.7 ± 2.0body niche samples
20 HC (15 F/5 M)
Age: 21.7 ± 2.0
16 IBS-D (11 F/5 M)IIILower biodiversity in IBS-D vs HCs in fecal samples, no biodiversity differences in mucosal samplesFeces samples and colonic biopsyT-RFLP[71]
Age: 23-52↓ Clostridiales
21 HCs (17 F/4 M)↓ Planctomycetaceae[62]
Age: 21-60
81 IBS (69 F/27 M)I and IIStaphylococcus aureus detected only in IBS subjects, with higher prevalence in IBS-CFeces
15 IBS-CEnterotoxin-encoding gene of C. perfringens detectedqPCR (SYBR Green)
Age: 20-73only in IBS subjects
23 HCs (16 F/7 M)Helicobacter pylori detected in 3 IBS subjects, none inSequencing of S. aureus amplicons
Age: 26-64HCs
23IBS-D (17 F/6 M)IIILower microbial richness in IBS-DFeces454 Pyrosequencing of the V1-V3 and V6 regions of 16S rRNA gene[54]
Age: 23-70Structural changes in IBS-D vs HC, from phylum to genus
23 HCs (18/5 M)↑ Proteobacteria
Age: 21-58↑γ-proteobacteria
Enterobacteriales
Enterobacteriaceae
Faecalibacterium
F. prausnitziiqPCR (SYBR Green)
37 IBS (26 F/11 M)IIClustering by microbiota composition revealed subgroups of IBS patients: (1) a group (n = 15) with normal-like microbiota composition compared with HCs; and (2) a group (n = 22) with large microbiota-wide changes characterized by an increase of Firmicutes (mainly clostridia/Clostridiales) and a depletion of BacteroidetesFecesPyrosequencing of the V4 region of 16S rRNA gene[77]
15 IBS-DBacteroides
10 IBS-CAlistipes
12 IBS-ALachnospiraceae incertae sedis
Age: 37 ± 12↑ Butyrate-producing Eubacterium halli and
20 HCs (13 F/7 M)desmolans
Age: 39 ± 9B. adolescentis
47 IBSIIIHigher number of mucosa-associated bacteria inRectalFISH[32]
27 IBS-DIBSbiopsies
20 IBS-C
Age average: 34.3Bacteroides
26 HCsEubacterium rectale-C. coccoides
Age average: 46.1Bifidobacterium in IBS-D than in IBS-C
75 rural IBSIIIEnterobacterFecesCulture-based analysis[29]
Age: 4-18Enterococcus
20 Hurban HCsLactobacillus
Age: 5-15Bifidobacterium
22 IBS-DIIHigher variability among IBS subjectsFecesMicrobiota array[40]
Age: 8-18No difference between IBS-D and HCs at phylum level. No difference for Clostridium and Faecalibacterium
22 HCsVeillonellaPyrosequencing (V1-V2-V3 region of 16S
Age: 11-18PrevotellarRNA)
Enterobacter
Lactobacillus
Bifidobacterium
Verrucomicrobium
Difference at species level in the genus Bacteroides:
B. fragilis
B. thetaiotaomicron
B. ovatus
B. salyersiae
Positive abundance correlation between Veillonella-Haemophilus and Streptococcus; negative for Ruminococcus
Confermation of data on Clostridia, Bacteroidetes, BifidobacteriumFISH
Confermation of data on Bifidobacterium, Prevotella, FaecalibacteriumqPCR
14 IBS-C (14 F)IINo differences in total strict and facultative anaerobes between IBS-C and HCsFecesCulture-based analysis[28]
12 HCs (14 F)No difference in hydrolytic bacterial communities
Age: 20-59↑ Lactate utilizing sulphate-reducing bacteria (SRB)
↓ Lactate non SRB (butyrate-producing)
↑ H2-utilizing SRB
↓ H2-utilizing non SRB (acetogenic, methanogens)
Enterobacteriaceae
Bifidobacterium
Lactobacillus
BifidobacteriumFISH
Roseburia-E. rectale
19 IBSIII↑ BifidobacteriaceaeFecesMicrobiota Array[42]
24 HCs↑ Lactobacillaceae
Age: 33.6 ± 9.1Clostridium cluster IX
Eubacterium rectale
Enterococcus faecium
Clostridium difficile
Bacillus cereus and B. clausii
Campilobacter spp.
Bacteroides/Prevotella
Veillonella
14 IBS-D(3 F/11 M)IIIE. coliFecesqPCR (SYBR Green)[58]
18 HCs (7 F/11 M)Clostridium leptum
Age: 18-65Bifidobacterium
16 IBSReduced microbial diversity in IBSColonic biopsies and fecesPyrosequencing (V1-V2 regions of 16S rRNA)[48]
9 HCsIn mucosal samples:
↑ Bacteroidaceae
In fecal samples:
↑ Rikenellaceae
↑ Porphyromonadaceae
↓ Ruminococcaceae
IBS-D:
Acinetobacter, Leuconostoc, Butyricimonas, Odoribacter (fecal)
Desulfovibrio, Oribacterium (biopsies)
IBS-C:
Alistipes, Butyricimonas (feces) and Bacteroides (biopsies)
Fusobacterium, Eubacterium, Coprococcus, Eubacterium, Haemophilus, Neisseria, Streptococcus, Veillonella
2 IBS-DIIIAlphaproteobacteriaFecesPyrosequencing (16S rRNA gene)[89]
1 HCs↑ Facultative anaerobe (Proteobacteria,
Several sampling over 6-8 wkStreptococcus) in days of acute diarrhea