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Phages Dynamics and Influences During Human Gut Microbiome Establishment (METAKIDS)

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Pasteur Institute

Status

Terminated

Conditions

Human Gut Microbiome Development

Treatments

Other: collection of diapers with fresh stools

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Industry
Other

Identifiers

NCT03296631
2016-097
ID RCB number : 2017-A00750-53 (Other Identifier)

Details and patient eligibility

About

Microbial communities are key components of human environment. Consequently, human gut microbiome have been extensively studied providing a better understanding of the relations between bacterial populations and host physiology. However, a typical analysis tends to elude the complexity of the mixes in term of species, strains, as well as extra-chromosomal DNA molecules such as and phages. MetaKids project aims at bringing, at an unprecedented resolution, a new view of those populations and the internal relationships during human gut establishment, a crucial step with long-term impacts on host health. This project relies on the ability of Meta3C, a newly technique developed in the lab, to identify the bacterial host genomes of the different phages the investigators will detect thanks to the physical collision these molecules experience. Given the role that human gut phages may play in shaping the development of host microbiomes, their potential for application is of great interest.

Full description

Over the last decade, the role of microorganisms residing in human intestines has been intensively studied. The intestinal microbiome includes bacteria, viruses, fungi and archaea. The importance of microbiome to human health is highlighted by the observation that dysbiotic shifts in these microbial communities have been associated with numerous human diseases, including obesity, inflammatory bowel disorders, autoimmune disease or gastrointestinal cancer. It is also clearly established that some of these microorganisms interact with the immune system and contribute to its development. The intestinal microbiome is established soon after birth, and its composition changes over the next several years toward a stereotypical 'adult-like' bacterial community structure. Epidemiological studies have demonstrated the importance of this period for a long-term health. It also has been shown that this process can be influenced by multiple interacting factors such as nutrition, antibiotic use and others environmental factors. Much less is known on the viral part of human microbiome. Most of them are phages (phageome) that are known to modulate microbial population through predation or transfer of genetic information between bacteria, and are likely to have important effects on intestinal microbiome establishment and, consequently, human physiology. MetaKids project aims at understanding how the gut phageome develops during the early human life and how it influences the composition of the bacterial microbiome. The investigators will carry a longitudinal study of 15-20 infants from 3-9 months till age 24-30 months. By combining latest metagenomic methods, will be investigated: 1) the composition, evolution and dynamic of the phageome and bacterial microbiome over this critical period; 2) the interactions between phages and bacteria and their relationships; and 3) the impact of environmental factors, like vaccinations or antibiotics treatment on the phages populations. The project is based on the combination of innovative recent metagenomic techniques developed in the lab. DNA is an ubiquitous and stable molecule that can be used as a marker of "compartmentalization" at cellular and population levels, providing important information regarding the genomic structure of a mix of species. Therefore, by combining approaches like purification of virales particles and 3C related methods, the investigators propose to characterize infant gut microbiome establishment and decipher the relationships between the different genomic entities present during this period. This project will bring crucial data on the role of phages during early life of human intestinal tract. Intervention to modify/control intestinal population is a dynamic field and MetaKids project will bring new perspectives for this research area.

Enrollment

19 patients

Sex

All

Ages

10 weeks to 9 months old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Child attending at least 4 days a week one of the two municipal municipal nursery (crèches) in the town of Orsay (91, France);
  2. Aged less than 9 months at the time of entry to the crèche (August-October 2017);
  3. Parent (s) / legal representative not opposed to the child's participation in the research;

Exclusion criteria

  • Toilet training;
  • Prematurity;
  • Participation in clinical research requiring the use of a drug.

Trial design

19 participants in 1 patient group

children
Description:
Enrollment of 15 to 20 children (\< 9 months old) at the early beginning of their entry in nursery (crèche) between August and November 2017. This cohort will be followed during a maximum period of 36 months . Diapers with fresh stools will be collected once a week per child and then frozen. Spontaneous personal day care informations given by the parents to the nurses and recorded in each child's daily logbook will be collected for the research. No specific interviews will be conducted.
Treatment:
Other: collection of diapers with fresh stools

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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