Pre‐transplant and longitudinal changes in faecal microbiome characteristics are associated with subsequent development of chronic graft‐versus‐host disease

Author:

El Jurdi Najla12ORCID,Holtan Shernan G.12,Hoeschen Andrea12,Velguth Jessica3,Hillmann Benjamin4,Betts Brian C.12,MacMillan Margaret L.1,Weisdorf Daniel J.12ORCID,Khoruts Alexander56,Rashidi Armin12ORCID,Shields‐Cutler Robin7

Affiliation:

1. Blood and Marrow Transplant Program, Departments of Medicine and Pediatrics University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

2. Division of Hematology, Oncology, and Transplantation, Department of Medicine University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

3. College of Biological Sciences, BioTechnology Institute University of Minnesota Saint Paul Minnesota USA

4. Department of Computer Science and Engineering University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

5. Division of Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition, Department of Medicine University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

6. Center for Immunology University of Minnesota Minneapolis Minnesota USA

7. Department of Biology Macalester College Saint Paul Minnesota USA

Abstract

SummaryThe role of the gastrointestinal microbiome in predisposing to chronic graft‐versus‐host disease (cGVHD), an immune‐mediated haematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) complication, is not well defined. We examined the relationship of the host faecal microbiome with subsequent cGVHD development by analysing baseline stool samples as well as post‐HCT changes in microbiome composition and metabolite pathway analyses. We analysed pre‐transplant baseline samples from 11 patients who subsequently developed cGVHD compared to 13 controls who did not develop acute GVHD or cGVHD at any time. We found a significant differential abundance of multiple taxa at baseline between cGVHD versus controls, including the Actinobacteria phylum and Clostridium genus. A subgroup analysis of longitudinal samples within each patient revealed a greater loss of alpha diversity from baseline to post‐engraftment in patients who subsequently developed cGVHD. Metabolic pathways analysis revealed that two pathways associated with short‐chain fatty acid metabolism were enriched in cGVHD patient microbiomes: β‐oxidation and acyl‐CoA synthesis, and γ‐aminobutyrate shunt. In contrast, a tryptophan catabolism pathway was enriched in controls. Our findings show a distinct pattern of baseline microbiome and metabolic capacity that may play a role in modulating alloreactivity in patients developing cGVHD. These findings support the therapeutic potential of microbiome manipulation for cGVHD prevention.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Hematology

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