Faecal metabolite deficit, gut inflammation and diet in Parkinson's disease: Integrative analysis indicates inflammatory response syndrome

Author:

Augustin Aisha12,Guennec Adrien Le3,Umamahesan Chianna12,Kendler‐Rhodes Aidan4,Tucker Rosalind M.12,Chekmeneva Elena567,Takis Panteleimon567,Lewis Matthew567,Balasubramanian Karthik1,DeSouza Neville2,Mullish Benjamin H7ORCID,Taylor David12,Ryan Suzanne8,Whelan Kevin4,Ma Yun9,Ibrahim Mohammad A. A.10,Bjarnason Ingvar11,Hayee Bu’ Hussain11,Charlett André112,Dobbs Sylvia M.111ORCID,Dobbs R. John111,Weller Clive1

Affiliation:

1. Institute of Pharmaceutical Science King's College London London UK

2. The Maudsley Hospital London UK

3. NMR Facility King's College London London UK

4. Nutritional Sciences King's College London London UK

5. National Phenome Centre Imperial College London London UK

6. Section of Bioanalytical Chemistry Imperial College London London UK

7. Department of Metabolism Digestion and Reproduction Imperial College, London UK

8. Imaging King's College Hospital London UK

9. Institute of Liver Studies King's College Hospital London UK

10. Immunological Medicine King's College Hospital London UK

11. Gastroenterology King's College Hospital London UK

12. Statistics, Modelling and Economics UK Health Security Agency London UK

Abstract

ABSTRACTBackgroundGut‐brain axis is widely implicated in the pathophysiology of Parkinson's disease (PD). We take an integrated approach to considering the gut as a target for disease‐modifying intervention, using continuous measurements of disease facets irrespective of diagnostic divide.MethodsWe characterised 77 participants with diagnosed‐PD, 113 without, by dietary/exogenous substance intake, faecal metabolome, intestinal inflammation, serum cytokines/chemokines, clinical phenotype including colonic transit time. Complete‐linkage hierarchical cluster analysis of metabolites discriminant for PD‐status was performed.ResultsLonger colonic transit was linked to deficits in faecal short‐chain‐fatty acids outside PD, to a ‘tryptophan‐containing metabolite cluster’ overall. Phenotypic cluster analysis aggregated colonic transit with brady/hypokinesia, tremor, sleep disorder and dysosmia, each individually associated with tryptophan‐cluster deficit. Overall, a faster pulse was associated with deficits in a metabolite cluster including benzoic acid and an imidazole‐ring compound (anti‐fungals) and vitamin B3 (anti‐inflammatory) and with higher serum CCL20 (chemotactic for lymphocytes/dendritic cells towards mucosal epithelium). The faster pulse in PD was irrespective of postural hypotension. The benzoic acid‐cluster deficit was linked to (well‐recognised) lower caffeine and alcohol intakes, tryptophan‐cluster deficit to higher maltose intake. Free‐sugar intake was increased in PD, maltose intake being 63% higher (p = .001). Faecal calprotectin was 44% (95% CI 5%, 98%) greater in PD [p = .001, adjusted for proton‐pump inhibitors (p = .001)], with 16% of PD‐probands exceeding a cut‐point for clinically significant inflammation compatible with inflammatory bowel disease. Higher maltose intake was associated with exceeding this calprotectin cut‐point.ConclusionsEmerging picture is of (i) clinical phenotype being described by deficits in microbial metabolites essential to gut health; (ii) intestinal inflammation; (iii) a systemic inflammatory response syndrome.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Molecular Medicine,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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