TY - JOUR
T1 - Comparison of Different Sites of Microbiota Shows Increased Pseudomonas Species in the Gut Mucosa in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
AU - ColoBAC Study Group (Collaborating Group)
AU - Schult-Hannemann, David
AU - Gassner, Christina
AU - Thur, Niklas
AU - Hennig, Chiara
AU - Fricke, Lisa S.
AU - Liotta, Lucia
AU - Weidlich, Simon
AU - Matchado, Monica Steffi
AU - Stecher, Bärbel D.
AU - Arps, Leona
AU - Steiger, Katja
AU - Shakhtour, Julius
AU - Jesinghaus, Moritz D.
AU - List, Markus D.
AU - Janssen, Klaus Peter D.
AU - Pourjam, Mohsen S.
AU - Neuhaus, Klaus
AU - Haller, Dirk D.
AU - Schmid, Roland M.D.
AU - Quante, Michael D.
AU - Middelhoff, Moritz
AU - Maurer, H. Carlo
AU - Abdelhafez, Mohamed
AU - Mayr, Ulrich
AU - Ulrich, Jörg
AU - Heilmeier, Markus
AU - Elnegouly, Mayada
AU - Wiessner, Johannes
AU - Bauer, Ulrike
AU - Lahmer, Tobias
AU - Ringelhan, Marc
AU - Rasch, Sebastian
AU - Ehmer, Ursula
AU - Phillip, Veit
AU - Einwächter, Henrik
AU - Geisler, Fabian
AU - Treiber, Matthias
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s).
PY - 2026/2/1
Y1 - 2026/2/1
N2 - Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD), is associated with changes in the gut microbiome. Studies comparing fecal, gut mucosal, and salivary microbiomes are rare, and questions remain regarding the interaction of these compartments. Methods In this case-control study, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing was performed on samples from stool, intestinal mucosa, and saliva of 120 patients with IBD. Patients with signs of non-IBD colonic inflammation (N = 28) and healthy subjects (N = 67) served as controls. A total of 480 16S profiles were analyzed. The results were evaluated with multiple clinical and pathological parameters and potential confounders were considered. The study aimed to find microbial biomarkers specific to IBD and signatures of intestinal barrier dysfunction. Results Fecal diversity of IBD patients was reduced and Pseudomonas species was significantly increased in the mucosa of IBD patients (Pseudomonas-positive mucosa [PSM positive], P value <. 001, Mann-Whitney U test). Comparison of matched stool and mucosa samples showed high abundance of Pseudomonas species in gut mucosa but not in fecal samples, especially in CD patients. Interestingly, in PSM positive, Paracoccus species, Bacteroides species, and Streptococcus species were more abundant. Importantly, the results were independent of disease severity, histopathology, medication, and other metadata. Conclusions The opportunistic pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas species is more prevalent in the gut mucosa of patients with IBD. This indicates a disruption of the gut barrier with increasing mucosal colonization or invasion of the bacteria. The finding is independent of clinical metadata and confounders and occurs in new-onset IBD but not in non-IBD intestinal inflammation, which suggests disease specificity.
AB - Background Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD), is associated with changes in the gut microbiome. Studies comparing fecal, gut mucosal, and salivary microbiomes are rare, and questions remain regarding the interaction of these compartments. Methods In this case-control study, 16S rRNA gene amplicon sequencing was performed on samples from stool, intestinal mucosa, and saliva of 120 patients with IBD. Patients with signs of non-IBD colonic inflammation (N = 28) and healthy subjects (N = 67) served as controls. A total of 480 16S profiles were analyzed. The results were evaluated with multiple clinical and pathological parameters and potential confounders were considered. The study aimed to find microbial biomarkers specific to IBD and signatures of intestinal barrier dysfunction. Results Fecal diversity of IBD patients was reduced and Pseudomonas species was significantly increased in the mucosa of IBD patients (Pseudomonas-positive mucosa [PSM positive], P value <. 001, Mann-Whitney U test). Comparison of matched stool and mucosa samples showed high abundance of Pseudomonas species in gut mucosa but not in fecal samples, especially in CD patients. Interestingly, in PSM positive, Paracoccus species, Bacteroides species, and Streptococcus species were more abundant. Importantly, the results were independent of disease severity, histopathology, medication, and other metadata. Conclusions The opportunistic pathogenic bacterium Pseudomonas species is more prevalent in the gut mucosa of patients with IBD. This indicates a disruption of the gut barrier with increasing mucosal colonization or invasion of the bacteria. The finding is independent of clinical metadata and confounders and occurs in new-onset IBD but not in non-IBD intestinal inflammation, which suggests disease specificity.
KW - Pseudomonas
KW - gut barrier
KW - inflammatory bowel disease
KW - microbiome
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029002677
U2 - 10.1093/ibd/izaf185
DO - 10.1093/ibd/izaf185
M3 - Article
C2 - 41060256
AN - SCOPUS:105029002677
SN - 1078-0998
VL - 32
SP - 339
EP - 349
JO - Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
JF - Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
IS - 2
ER -