Table 4 The 15 most highly abundant bacterial genera, as a percentage of the total bacterial genera, for each consensus molecular subtype (CMS), as calculated using RNA-seq metagenomics.
From: Distinct gut microbiome patterns associate with consensus molecular subtypes of colorectal cancer
CMS1 | CMS2 | CMS3 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Genus | % | Genus | % | Genus | % |
Bacteroides | 48.5 | Bacteroides | 66.6 | Bacteroides | 27.6 |
Fusobacterium | 15.7 | Fusobacterium | 4.0 | Faecalibacterium | 5.8 |
Hungatella | 7.9 | Prevotella | 3.8 | Clostridium | 5.5 |
Prevotella | 4.0 | Roseburia | 2.6 | Roseburia | 4.7 |
Porphyromonas | 2.8 | Faecalibacterium | 2.2 | Blautia | 2.8 |
Lachnoclostridium | 2.7 | Porphyromonas | 1.3 | Lachnoclostridium | 2.2 |
Campylobacter | 1.6 | Klebsiella | 1.1 | Prevotella | 2.1 |
Leptotrichia | 1.2 | Clostridium | 0.9 | Clostridioides | 1.6 |
Candidatus Desulfofervidus | 0.8 | Selenomonas | 0.8 | Klebsiella | 1.6 |
Clostridium | 0.6 | Blautia | 0.6 | Eubacterium | 1.4 |
Faecalibacterium | 0.6 | Eubacterium | 0.5 | Parabacteroides | 1.2 |
Roseburia | 0.5 | Lachnoclostridium | 0.5 | Hungatella | 1.1 |
Blautia | 0.5 | Ruminococcus | 0.5 | Alistipes | 1.0 |
Treponema | 0.5 | Bacillus | 0.4 | Selenomonas | 0.8 |
Klebsiella | 0.5 | Hungatella | 0.4 | Ruminococcus | 0.7 |