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Characterisation of the hospital-acquired diarrhoeal gut microbiota and metabolome in response to infectious and non-infectious factors

thesis
posted on 2022-06-27, 01:28 authored by MARIJANA BOSNJAK


Non-infectious causes of hospital acquired-diarrhoea alter the gut microbial community, increase susceptibility to gut infections and compromise health outcomes. By studying the microbiota and metabolome associated with hospital-acquired diarrhoea, this thesis shows that antibiotic treatment causes the greatest disturbance. The study also shows that Clostridioides difficile, a significant hospital pathogen, colonises and causes disease in a range of antibiotic disrupted environments. Importantly, C. difficile infection can be differentiated from non-C. difficile infection through by-products of C. difficile amino acid fermentation. Furthermore, changes in the composition and abundance of these by-products as the gut environment becomes increasingly challenging, demonstrate how C. difficile gains a foothold the gut through securing energy from a range of amino acids. The findings are clinically significant and provide further insights into how C. difficile exploits a range of gastrointestinal environments to proliferate and cause disease.

History

Principal supervisor

Dena Lyras

Additional supervisor 1

Priscilla Johanesen

Additional supervisor 2

Sarah Larcombe

Additional supervisor 3

Grant Jenkin

Year of Award

2022

Department, School or Centre

Biomedical Sciences (Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute)

Additional Institution or Organisation

Microbiology

Campus location

Australia

Course

Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Faculty

Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences

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    Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Theses

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