Complex Host Genetics Influence the Microbiome in Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Abstract
Human genetics and host-associated microbial communities have been associated independently with a wide range of chronic diseases. One of the strongest associations in each case is inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), but disease risk cannot be explained fully by either factor individually. Recent findings point to interactions between host genetics and microbial exposures as important contributors to disease risk in IBD. These include evidence of the partial heritability of the gut microbiota and the conferral of gut mucosal inflammation by microbiome transplant even when the dysbiosis was initially genetically derived. Although there have been several tests for association of individual genetic loci with bacterial taxa, there has been no direct comparison of complex genome-microbiome associations in large cohorts of patients with an immunity-related disease.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Sep 09, 2016
- Accession Number
- AD1007184
Entities
People
- Andrea D. Tyler
- Caitlin Russell
- Curtis Huttenhower
- Dan Knights
- Dirk Gevers
- Floris Imhann
- Gabriel A. Al-ghalith
- Gerard Dijkstra
- Hailiang Huang
- Hu Huang
- Jenny Sauk
- Jo Knight
- Joanne M. Stempak
- Mark J. Daly
- Mark S. Silverberg
- Pajau Vangay
- Ramnik J. Xavier
- Rinse K. Weersma
- Suzanne Van Sommeren
Organizations
- Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health