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연구성과(결과보고서,논문,특허)
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- 작성일2021-02-22
- 최종수정일2021-02-22
- 담당부서연구기획과
- 연락처043-719-8033
Microorganisms, 2020.8(6), E907-0, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8060907
The Association between Gut Microbiota and Uremia of Chronic Kidney Disease
Kim J, Kim HE;Park J;Cho H;Kwak MJ;Kim BY;Yang S;Lee J;Kim D;Joo K;Kim Y;Kim BS;Lee H
Abstract
Chronic kidney disease (CKD)-associated uremia aggravates—and is aggravated by—gut dysbiosis. However, the correlation between CKD severity and gut microbiota and/or their uremic metabolites is unclear. We enrolled 103 CKD patients with stage 1 to 5 and 46 healthy controls.
We analyzed patients’ gut microbiota by MiSeq system and measured the serum concentrations of four uremic metabolites (p-cresyl sulfate, indoxyl sulfate, p-cresyl glucuronide, and trimethylamine N-oxide) by liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry. Serum concentrations of the uremic metabolites increased with kidney function deterioration. Gut microbial diversity did not di er among the examined patient and control groups. In moderate or higher stage CKD groups, Oscillibacter showed positive interactions with other microbiota, and the proportions of Oscillibacter were positively correlated with those of the uremic metabolites. The gut microbiota, particularly Oscillibacter, was predicted to contribute to pyruvate metabolism which increased with CKD progression. Relative abundance of Oscillibacter was significantly associated with both serum uremic metabolite levels and kidney function. Predicted functional analysis suggested that kidney-function-associated changes in the contribution of Oscillibacter to pyruvate metabolism in CKD may greatly a ect the gut environment according to kidney function, resulting in dysbiosis concomitant with uremic toxin production. The gut microbiota could be associated with uremia progression in CKD. These results may provide basis for further metagenomics analysis of kidney diseases.
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/microorganisms8060907
- ISBN or ISSN: 2076-2607
- 본 연구는 질병관리본부 연구개발과제연구비를 지원받아 수행되었습니다.
- This research was supported by a fund by Research of Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
