Author ORCID Identifier

https://orcid.org/0009-0009-3461-0740

Date of Award

2025

Document Type

Thesis (Master's)

Department or Program

Microbiology and Immunology

First Advisor

George O'Toole

Second Advisor

Mark Sundrud

Third Advisor

Benjamin Ross

Abstract

Cystic fibrosis (CF) is associated with dysbiosis of the gut microbiome, alterations in intestinal mucus production, aberrant bile acid (BA) metabolism, fat malabsorption, and chronic inflammation. As little is known about BAs in CF, we performed both comprehensive and targeted BA profiling in stool of children with or without CF. Our results reveal that select BA species and metabolites are significantly different between children with CF (cwCF) and healthy controls. There is also a trend towards higher primary cBA and total BA levels for cwCF. Matched bacterial metagenomic analyses showed no change in a-diversity between groups in our small cohort, at odds with previous studies, whereas changes in relative abundance of Bacteroides (lower) and E. coli (increased) species is consistent with prior reports. A robust trend was noted toward reduced abundance of bsh gene families (Wilcox test, p = 0.052) – a key rate-limiting enzyme required for bacterial synthesis of secondary BAs – in cwCF. Modest changes in both BAs and microbial BA metabolism-related gene abundances may be attributable to small sample sizes, but also suggest likely combination defects in both host and microbial BA metabolic pathways in cwCF. Importantly, although fecal BA profiles from both ferret and mouse CF models showed significant differences from human BA profiles, only the ferret model reproduced significant differences between CF and nonCF animals, highlighting ferrets as a potentially more appropriate model for studying BA in stool in the context of CF. Together, these results provide new insights into CF-related BA dysmetabolism in cwCF and highlight limitations of CF animal models for BA functional studies.

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