The rheumatoid arthritis gut microbial biobank reveals core microbial species that associate and effect on host inflammation and autoimmune responses

Gut microbiota dysbiosis has been implicated in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and influences disease progression. Although molecular and culture‐independent studies revealed RA patients harbored a core microbiome and had characteristic bacterial species, the lack of cultured bacterial strains had limite...

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Veröffentlicht in:iMeta 2024-10, Vol.3 (5), p.e242-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Hao‐Jie, Liu, Chang, Sun, Xin‐Wei, Wei, Rui‐Qi, Liu, Ling‐Wei, Chen, Hao‐Yu, Abdugheni, Rashidin, Wang, Chang‐Yu, Wang, Xiao‐Meng, Jiang, He, Niu, Han‐Yu, Feng, Li‐Juan, He, Jia‐Hui, Jiang, Yu, Zhao, Yan, Wang, Yu‐Lin, Shu, Qiang, Bi, Ming‐Xia, Zhang, Lei, Liu, Bin, Liu, Shuang‐Jiang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Gut microbiota dysbiosis has been implicated in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and influences disease progression. Although molecular and culture‐independent studies revealed RA patients harbored a core microbiome and had characteristic bacterial species, the lack of cultured bacterial strains had limited investigations on their functions. This study aimed to establish an RA‐originated gut microbial biobank (RAGMB) that covers and further to correlates and validates core microbial species on clinically used and diagnostic inflammation and immune indices. We obtained 3200 bacterial isolates from fecal samples of 20 RA patients with seven improved and 11 traditional bacterial cultivation methods. These isolates were phylogenetically identified and selected for RAGMB. The RAGMB harbored 601 bacterial strains that represented 280 species (including 43 novel species) of seven bacterial phyla. The RAGMB covered 93.2% at species level of medium‐ and high‐abundant (relative abundances ≥0.2%) RA gut microbes, and included four rare species of the phylum Synergistota. The RA core gut microbiome was defined and composed of 20 bacterial species. Among these, Mediterraneibacter tenuis and Eubacterium rectale were two species that statistically and significantly correlated with clinically used diagnostic indices such as erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) and IL‐10. Thus, M. tenuis and E. rectale were selected for experimental validation using DSS‐treated and not DSS‐treated mice model. Results demonstrated both M. tenuis and E. rectale exacerbated host inflammatory responses, including shortened colon length and increased spleen weight, decreased IL‐10 and increased IL‐17A levels in plasma. Overall, we established the RAGMB, defined the RA core microbiome, correlated and demonstrated core microbial species effected on host inflammatory and immune responses. This work provides diverse gut microbial resources for future studies on RA etiology and potential new targets for new biomedical practices. Intensive collection of 3200 bacterial isolates from fecal samples of newly diagnosed rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients resulted in an RA‐originated gut microbial biobank (RAGMB). This RAGMB has 601 strains that represent 280 bacterial species (including 43 novel species), and covers 93.2% of medium‐ and high‐abundant gut microbial species of the RA fecal samples. By integrating additional RA cohort metagenomic data, an RA core microbiome composing of 20 core microbial species wer
ISSN:2770-596X
2770-5986
2770-596X
DOI:10.1002/imt2.242