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Volume 7, Issue 4(Suppl)

J Gastrointest Dig Syst, an open access journal

ISSN: 2161-069X

Gastro Congress 2017

September 11-12, 2017

September 11-12, 2017 | Paris, France

12

th

Euro-Global Gastroenterology Conference

The role of microbial modification of bile acids for host-microbe cross talk in a cohort of Crohn’s disease and

ulcerative colitis

Susan Joyce

University College Cork, Ireland

T

he GI tract is recognised as a super organ where co-evolved mutualistic relationship benefits both the microbial residents and

human health. For instance, while the liver is responsible for bile acid synthesis and conjugation, the gut microbiota is responsible

for the diversity of bile moieties. Bile moieties are more than just emulsifiers of lipid and liberators of vitamins from dietary

components. They act as signalling molecules that can exert their effects both locally and systemically, the most potent signalling

molecules are those generated through microbial conversion. Here, we have examined an Irish cohort of inflammatory bowel disease

(IBD) to include Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis (n=182). We have stratified based on volunteer demographics and analysed

a range of metabolites, including bile moieties, hormones and cytokines in these patients. Here we link bile modifications with

bile acid signalling and the incidence of bile acid diarrhoea (BAD) in these patients. We show that BAD is elevated in incidence of

Crohn’s disease irrespective of BMI and that this incidence is due to increased levels of microbial produced secondary bile acids and

to aberrant hormonal signalling.

Biography

Susan Joyce graduated with a

B.Sc

from NUI Maynooth in Biology and Mathematics and a research PhD in host-miocrobe interactions. She was awarded a Marie

Curie Fellowship to examine cis and trans acting factors affecting mRNA synthesis and microbial gene expression at the Ecole Normal Superieure, Paris which

included a stint at the Max Planck Institute, Berlin. Before returning to UCC, Dr Joyce was a postdoctoral scientist at Trinity College Dublin and the Univerity of

Bath, UK. Dr Joyces’s main interest is in microbial genetic and biochemical systems that alter eukaryotic host signaling. Susan is currently a Lecturer in the School

of Biochemistry and Cell Biology and a funded Investigator in the APC Microbiome Institute as part of the Spoke 4 Host- Microbe Dialogue.

S.Joyce@ucc.ie

Susan Joyce, J Gastrointest Dig Syst 2017, 7:4(Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2161-069X-C1-052