Children who develop celiac disease are predicted to exhibit distinct metabolic pathways among their gut microbiota years before diagnosis

  • Kelley K
  • Dogru D
  • Huang Q
  • et al.
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Abstract

We analyzed gut microbiome data from children who later developed celiac disease (CD progressors) compared to healthy children in the first 5 years of life. Using fecal samples corresponding to the three phases of gut microbiome development, we uncovered enriched functional microbial pathways in CD progressors at age 1. Some of these pathways, implicated in bacterial pathogenesis, microbiota modulation, and inflammation, have been correlated with CD. We also identified taxa in CD progressors at age 1 including Lachnospiraceae , Alistipes , and Bifidobacterium dentium that were previously associated with CD. These findings suggest a potential role for these taxa and enriched pathways in pediatric CD onset years before diagnosis, highlighting potential for early interventions. While the findings of this exploratory study should be validated with larger sample sizes, our study suggests microbial metabolic pathways related to CD onset, enhancing our understanding of CD pathogenesis and the role of gut microbiome-mediated early alterations.

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Kelley, K., Dogru, D., Huang, Q., Yang, Y., Palm, N. W., Altindis, E., & Ludvigsson, J. (2025). Children who develop celiac disease are predicted to exhibit distinct metabolic pathways among their gut microbiota years before diagnosis. Microbiology Spectrum, 13(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/spectrum.01468-24

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