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The Effect of Probiotics, Antibiotics, and Antipyretic Analgesics on Gut Microbiota Modification
Author(s) -
Yeojun Yun,
HanNa Kim,
Song E. Kim,
Yoosoo Chang,
Seungho Ryu,
Hocheol Shin,
SoYoun Woo,
HyungLae Kim
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of bacteriology and virology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.179
H-Index - 12
eISSN - 2093-0429
pISSN - 1598-2467
DOI - 10.4167/jbv.2017.47.1.64
Subject(s) - antibiotics , gut flora , fusobacteria , verrucomicrobia , biology , microbiome , antipyretic , cefuroxime , feces , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , bacteria , pharmacology , immunology , 16s ribosomal rna , bioinformatics , analgesic , firmicutes , genetics
Human gut microbial community is playing a critical role in human health and associated with different human disease. In parallel, probiotics, antibiotics, and antipyretic analgesics (AAs) were developed to improve human health or cure human diseases. We therefore examined how probiotics, antibiotics, and AAs influence to the gut microbiota. Three independent case/control studies were designed from the cross-sectional cohort data of 1,463 healthy Koreans. The composition of the gut microbiota in each case and control group was determined via 16S ribosomal RNA Illumina next-generation sequencing. The correlation between microbial taxa and the consumption of each drug was tested using zero-inflated Gaussian mixture models, with covariate adjustment of age, sex, and body mass index (BMI). Probiotics, antibiotics, and AAs consumption yielded the significant differences in the gut microbiota, represented the lower abundance of Megasphaera in probiotics, the higher abundance of Fusobacteria in antibiotics, and the higher abundance of Butyrivibrio and Verrucomicrobia in AAs, compared to each control group. The reduction of Erysipelotrichaceae family was common in three drugs consumption.

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