Title of article :
Fecal Microbiota, Lactic Acid and Short Chain Fatty Levels of Infants Following Rotavirus Infection Revealed by Illumina Miseq High-Throughput Sequencing and HPLC Method
Author/Authors :
li, lin Key Laboratory of Dairy Sciences - Ministry of Education - Food College - Northeast Agricultural University - Harbin, China , huang, dongxu Key Laboratory of Dairy Sciences - Ministry of Education - Food College - Northeast Agricultural University - Harbin, China , nevin, austin Istituto Di Fotonica E Nanotecnologie - Consiglio Nazionale Delle Ricerche (IFN-CNR) - Milano, Italy , fei, peng College of Food and Biological Engineering - Henan University of Science and Technology - Luoyang, China , Guo, Ling Key Laboratory of Dairy Sciences - Ministry of Education - Food College - Northeast Agricultural University - Harbin, China
Pages :
9
From page :
1
To page :
9
Abstract :
background: rotavirus (rv) is one of the major causes of acute gastroenteritis in infants. it is indispensable to demonstrate the relationship between the diversity and richness of gut microbiota and rv infection using more accurate and effective technology. objectives: to investigate the differences in fecal microbiota, lactic acid, and shortchain fatty acids (scfas) levels between rotaviralinduced diarrhea (rd) infants and healthy (h) infants. methods: the infants comprised of 25 infants aged few days to six months, who were in good health (n = 12) or diagnosed with rotavirus (n = 13). fecal matter was analyzed with illumina miseq highthroughput sequencing technique targeting the 16s rrna gene v3-v4 region. lactic acids and scfas were measured by the highperformance liquid chromatography (hplc) technique. results: compared to h infants, the fecal samples in rd infants had lower shannon diversity index and the bacteria richness (p < 0.05). a higher proportion of proteobacteria, enterobacteriaceae and klebsiella, and lower abundances of actinobacteria and knoellia (p < 0.05) were detected in fecal samples of rd infants. the total scfas content of fecal samples showed no distinction between rd and h infants, yet lower levels of lactic acid were observed in fecal samples of rd infants. conclusions: rotaviral infection in infants led to an alteration of fecal microbiota and lactic acid concentration compared with healthy infants. fecal microbiota and metabolite may advance the understanding and treatment of rd.
Keywords :
Rotaviral-Induced Diarrhea (RD) , Fecal , Infants , Lactic Acid , Short-Chain Fatty Acids , Microbiota
Journal title :
Jundishapur Journal of Microbiology (JJM)
Serial Year :
2019
Record number :
2500311
Link To Document :
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