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Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori) has been regarded as a definite carcinogenic bacterium for gastric cancer (GC). This multi-omics research was designed to investigate the genetic, microbial, and metabolic changes of GC patients when they are infected with H. pylori. We first mined The Cancer Genome Atlas Stomach Adenocarcinoma (STAD) data to identify the key genes and critical pathways in H. pylori-positive individuals with GC compared to H. pylori-negative individuals with GC. Then, fresh stool samples were collected from GC individuals screened for eligibility, and we analyzed the microbial changes and metabolite alterations between H. pylori-positive and H. pylori-negative GC individuals. Finally, we tried to explore the interaction between key gut flora and metabolite changes in GC patients infected with H. pylori. We identified three genes (GCG, APOA1, and IGFBP1) with significant relevance to H. pylori infection, and the survival monogram based on the three H. pylori-related genes showed good predictive ability for overall survival among GC individuals. 16S rRNA sequencing showed that the abundance of Escherichia-Shigella, Bacteroides, Enterococcus, and Lactobacillus was upregulated in GC cases with H. pylori at the level of genus. There exists a great difference in alpha and beta diversity between H. pylori group and non-H. pylori group. The untargeted metabolome analysis identified 295 significant fecal metabolites, and the levels of penitrem E, auberganol, stercobilinogen, and lys thr are upregulated in the H. pylori group. Finally, correlation analysis showed that there exists a significant correlation between the fecal metabolites and gut bacterial strains. This is the first clinical research to investigate the difference between GC patients with H. pylori and GC patients without H. pylori via multi-omics analysis. 16S rRNA sequencing along with untargeted metabolomics demonstrated decreased microbial diversity and metabolic dysregulation in gastric carcinoma individuals with H. pylori infection.IMPORTANCEThis is the first clinical research to systematically expound the difference between gastric cancer (GC) individuals with Helicobacter pylori and GC individuals without H. pylori from the perspective of multi-omics. This clinical study identified significant genes, microbes, and fecal metabolites, which exhibited nice power for differentiating GC individuals with H. pylori infection from GC individuals without H. pylori infection. This study provides a crucial basis for a better understanding of eradication therapy among the GC population.
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