A Case Western Reserve University School of
Medicine-led team of international researchers has for the first time
identified a fungus as a key factor in the development of Crohn's
disease. The researchers also linked a new bacterium to the previous
bacteria associated with Crohn's. The groundbreaking findings, published
on September 20th in mBio, could lead to potential new
treatments and ultimately, cures for the debilitating inflammatory bowel
disease, which causes severe abdominal pain, diarrhea, weight loss, and
fatigue.
"We already know that bacteria, in addition to genetic and dietary
factors, play a major role in causing Crohn's disease," said the study's
senior and corresponding author, Mahmoud A Ghannoum, PhD, professor and
director of the Center for Medical Mycology at Case Western Reserve and
University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center "Essentially, patients
with Crohn's have abnormal immune responses to these bacteria, which
inhabit the intestines of all people. While most researchers focus their
investigations on these bacteria, few have examined the role of fungi,
which are also present in everyone's intestines. Our study adds
significant new information to understanding why some people develop
Crohn's disease. Equally important, it can result in a new generation of
treatments, including medications and probiotics, which hold the
potential for making qualitative and quantitative differences in the
lives of people suffering from Crohn's."
Both bacteria and fungi are microorganisms -- infinitesimal forms of
life that can only be seen with a microscope. Fungi are eukaryotes:
organism whose cells contain a nucleus; they are closer to humans than
bacteria, which are prokaryotes: single-celled forms of life with no
nucleus. Collectively, the fungal community that inhabits the human body
is known as the mycobiome, while the bacteria are called the
bacteriome. (Fungi and bacteria are present throughout the body;
previously Ghannoum had found that people harbor between nine and 23
fungal species in their mouths.)
The researchers assessed the mycobiome and bacteriome of patients
with Crohn's disease and their Crohn's-free first degree relatives in
nine families in northern France and Belgium, and in Crohn's-free
individuals from four families living in the same geographic area.
Specifically, they analyzed fecal samples of 20 Crohn's and 28
Crohn's-free patients from nine families and of 21 Crohn's-free patients
of four families. The researchers found strong fungal-bacterial
interactions in those with Crohn's disease: two bacteria (Escherichia
coli and Serratia marcescens) and one fungus (Candida tropicalis) moved
in lock step. The presence of all three in the sick family members was
significantly higher compared to their healthy relatives, suggesting
that the bacteria and fungus interact in the intestines.
Additionally,
test-tube research by the Ghannoum-led team found that the three work
together (with the E. coli cells fusing to the fungal cells and S.
marcescens forming a bridge connecting the microbes) to produce a
biofilm -- a thin, slimy layer of microorganisms found in the body that
adheres to, among other sites, a portion of the intestines -- which can
prompt inflammation that results in the symptoms of Crohn's disease.
This is first time any fungus has been linked to Crohn's in humans;
previously it was only found in mice with the disease. The study is also
the first to include S. marcescens in the Crohn's-linked bacteriome.
Additionally, the researchers found that the presence of beneficial
bacteria was significantly lower in the Crohn's patients, corroborating
previous research findings.
"Among hundreds of bacterial and fungal species inhabiting the
intestines, it is telling that the three we identified were so highly
correlated in Crohn's patients," said Ghannoum.
"Furthermore, we found
strong similarities in what may be called the 'gut profiles' of the
Crohn's-affected families, which were strikingly different from the
Crohn's-free families. We have to be careful, though, and not solely
attribute Crohn's disease to the bacterial and fungal makeups of our
intestines. For example, we know that family members also share diet and
environment to significant degrees. Further research is needed to be
even more specific in identifying precipitators and contributors of
Crohn's."


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