Faecal proteomics links neutrophil degranulation with mortality in patients with alcohol-associated hepatitis

Author:

Kreimeyer Henriette,Gonzalez Carlos G,Fondevila Marcos F,Hsu Cynthia L,Hartmann Phillipp,Zhang Xinlian,Stärkel Peter,Bosques-Padilla FranciscoORCID,Verna Elizabeth C,Abraldes Juan G,Brown Robert S,Vargas Victor,Altamirano Jose,Caballería Juan,Shawcross Debbie LORCID,Louvet AlexandreORCID,Lucey Michael R,Mathurin PhilippeORCID,Garcia-Tsao Guadalupe,Bataller Ramón,Investigators AlcHepNet,Gonzalez David J,Schnabl BerndORCID

Abstract

ObjectivePatients with alcohol-associated hepatitis (AH) have a high mortality. Alcohol exacerbates liver damage by inducing gut dysbiosis, bacterial translocation and inflammation, which is characterised by increased numbers of circulating and hepatic neutrophils.DesignIn this study, we performed tandem mass tag (TMT) proteomics to analyse proteins in the faeces of controls (n=19), patients with alcohol-use disorder (AUD; n=20) and AH (n=80) from a multicentre cohort (InTeam). To identify protein groups that are disproportionately represented, we conducted over-representation analysis using Reactome pathway analysis and Gene Ontology to determine the proteins with the most significant impact. A faecal biomarker and its prognostic effect were validated by ELISA in faecal samples from patients with AH (n=70), who were recruited in a second and independent multicentre cohort (AlcHepNet).ResultFaecal proteomic profiles were overall significantly different between controls, patients with AUD and AH (principal component analysis p=0.001, dissimilarity index calculated by the method of Bray-Curtis). Proteins that showed notable differences across all three groups and displayed a progressive increase in accordance with the severity of alcohol-associated liver disease were predominantly those located in neutrophil granules. Over-representation and Reactome analyses confirmed that differentially regulated proteins are part of granules in neutrophils and the neutrophil degranulation pathway. Myeloperoxidase (MPO), the marker protein of neutrophil granules, correlates with disease severity and predicts 60-day mortality. Using an independent validation cohort, we confirmed that faecal MPO levels can predict short-term survival at 60 days.ConclusionsWe found an increased abundance of faecal proteins linked to neutrophil degranulation in patients with AH, which is predictive of short-term survival and could serve as a prognostic non-invasive marker.

Funder

NIH

Galicia Regional Government and Fulbright Fellowship

Service of the VA Office of Research and Development

Biomedical Laboratory Research & Development

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Center for Multiplexed Proteomics

Fond national de recherche scientifique Belgium

University of California San Diego

American Association for the Study of Liver Diseases

National Institutes of Health

San Diego Digestive Diseases Research Center

Université Catholique de Louvain, Belgium

National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism of the National Institutes of Health

Publisher

BMJ

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