Abstract
<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> Immunoglobulins (Ig) reactive with α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone (α-MSH), an anorexigenic neuropeptide, are present in humans and were previously associated with eating disorders. In this longitudinal study involving patients with anorexia nervosa (AN), we determined whether α-MSH in serum is bound to IgG and analyzed long-term dynamics of both α-MSH peptide and α-MSH-reactive Ig in relation to changes in BMI and gut microbiota composition. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> The study included 64 adolescents with a restrictive form of AN, whose serum samples were collected at hospital admission, discharge, and during a 1-year follow-up visit and 41 healthy controls, all females. <b><i>Results:</i></b> We found that in both study groups, approximately 40% of serum α-MSH was reversibly bound to IgG and that levels of α-MSH-reactive IgG but not of α-MSH peptide in patients with AN were low at hospital admission but recovered 1 year later. Total IgG levels were also low at admission. Moreover, BMI-standard deviation score correlated positively with α-MSH IgG in both groups studied but negatively with α-MSH peptide only in controls. Significant correlations between the abundance of specific bacterial taxa in the gut microbiota and α-MSH peptide and IgG levels were found in both study groups, but they were more frequent in controls. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> We conclude that IgG in the blood plays a role as an α-MSH-binding protein, whose characteristics are associated with BMI in both patients with AN and controls. Furthermore, the study suggests that low production of α-MSH-reactive IgG during the starvation phase in patients with AN may be related to altered gut microbiota composition.