%0 Journal Article %J Front Biosci (Elite Ed) %D 2018 %T Bariatric surgery drives major rearrangements of the intestinal microbiota including the biofilm composition. %A Campisciano, Giuseppina %A Cason, Carolina %A Palmisano, Silvia %A Giuricin, Michela %A Rizzardi, Alessia %A Croce, Lory Saveria %A De Manzini, Nicolo %A Comar, Manola %K Biofilms %K Case-Control Studies %K Gastric Bypass %K Gastrointestinal Microbiome %K Humans %K Intestinal Mucosa %K Obesity %K Prospective Studies %X

The intestinal microbiota disequilibrium has been associated with obesity, while the role of the gut mucosal biofilms in this pathology is still unknown. We analysed the changes in the intestinal microbiota of obese patients after bariatric surgery with the aim of disclosing the rearrangement of the biofilm configuration. Although the bariatric surgery drives major rearrangements of the gut microbiota, obese patients maintain the enterotype before and after surgery, as shown by normal weight patients, with an increase of and . The enterotype guarantees the strong ability to form a biofilm which allows a more efficient digestion of polysaccharides than planktonic communities and leads to the production of acetate which is a key player to inhibit enteropathogens. Additionally, the laparoscopic gastric bypass induces an increase of , a facultative anaerobic bacterium involved in intestinal and inflammatory disorders. Bariatric surgery influences the microbial composition of gut biofilm. Further studies are needed to elucidate the impact of this variation on recovery after surgery and on weight loss.

%B Front Biosci (Elite Ed) %V 10 %P 495-505 %8 2018 06 01 %G eng %1 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29772522?dopt=Abstract