Associations Between Race, Perceived Psychological Stress, and the Gut Microbiota in a Sample of Generally Healthy Black and White Women: A Pilot Study on the Role of Race and Perceived Psychological Stress.

Psychosom Med

From the Division of Preventive Medicine (Carson, Baskin), Department of Medicine, School of Medicine, Comprehensive Cancer Center (Carson, Baskin), and Department of Biostatistics (Wang, Cui), School of Public Health, University of Alabama at Birmingham; Center for Outcomes Research (Jackson), JPS Health Network, Fort Worth, Texas; Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology (Jackson), UNT Health Science Center, School of Public Health, Fort Worth, Texas; and Center for Clinical and Translational Sciences (Van Der Pol, Lefkowitz), and Department of Microbiology (Lefkowitz) and Department of Cell, Developmental and Integrative Biology (Morrow), University of Alabama at Birmingham.

Published: September 2018

Objective: Racial health disparities persist among black and white women for colorectal cancer. Understanding racial differences in the gut microbiota and related covariates (e.g., stress) may yield new insight into unexplained colorectal cancer disparities.

Methods: Healthy non-Hispanic black or white women (age ≥19 years) provided survey data, anthropometrics, and stool samples. Fecal DNA was collected and isolated from a wipe. Polymerase chain reaction was used to amplify the V4 region of the 16SrRNA gene and 250 bases were sequenced using the MiSeq platform. Microbiome data were analyzed using QIIME. Operational taxonomic unit data were log transformed and normalized. Analyses were conducted using linear models in R Package "limma."

Results: Fecal samples were analyzed for 80 women (M (SD) age = 39.9 (14.0) years, 47 black, 33 white). Blacks had greater average body mass index (33.3 versus 27.5 kg/m, p < .01) and waist circumference (98.3 versus 86.6 cm, p = .003) than whites. Whites reported more stressful life events (p = .026) and greater distress (p = .052) than blacks. Final models accounted for these differences. There were no significant differences in dietary variables. Unadjusted comparisons revealed no racial differences in alpha diversity. Racial differences were observed in beta diversity and abundance of top 10 operational taxonomic units. Blacks had higher abundances than whites of Faecalibacterium (p = .034) and Bacteroides (p = .038). Stress was associated with abundances of Bifidobacterium. The association between race and Bacteroides (logFC = 1.72, 0 = 0.020) persisted in fully adjusted models.

Conclusions: Racial differences in the gut microbiota were observed including higher Bacteroides among blacks. Efforts to cultivate an "ideal" gut microbiota may help reduce colorectal cancer risk.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6113071PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/PSY.0000000000000614DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

gut microbiota
16
black white
16
racial differences
16
white women
12
colorectal cancer
12
race perceived
8
perceived psychological
8
psychological stress
8
differences gut
8
women age
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!