Journal article

Unravelling the metabolic impact of SBS-associated microbial dysbiosis: Insights from the piglet short bowel syndrome model

PM Pereira-Fantini, SG Byars, J Pitt, S Lapthorne, F Fouhy, PD Cotter, JE Bines

Scientific Reports | NATURE PORTFOLIO | Published : 2017

Abstract

Liver disease is a major source of morbidity and mortality in children with short bowel syndrome (SBS). SBS-associated microbial dysbiosis has recently been implicated in the development of SBS-associated liver disease (SBS-ALD), however the pathological implications of this association have not been explored. In this study high-throughput sequencing of colonic content from the well-validated piglet SBS-ALD model was examined to determine alterations in microbial communities, and concurrent metabolic alterations identified in urine samples via targeted mass spectrometry approaches (GC-MS, LC-MS, FIA-MS) further uncovered impacts of microbial disturbance on metabolic outcomes in SBS-ALD. Mult..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Science Foundation Ireland


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Dr. Eva Rosberg-Cody for high-throughput DNA sequencing services, Prof. Catherine Stanton for assistance with the manuscript and Dr. Orla O'Sullivan for bioinformatics assistance. The Murdoch Childrens Research Institute (MCRI) is supported by the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support program. MCRI and VCGS are supported by the Victorian Government's Operational Infastructure Program. This publication has emanated from research supported in part by a research grant from Science Foundation Ireland (SFI) under Grant Number SFI/12/RC/2273.