Abstract
AbstractPatients with Crohn’s disease (CD) exhibit great heterogeneity in disease presentation and treatment responses, where distinct gut microbiota-host interplays may play part in the yet unresolved disease etiology. We here characterized absolute and relative single and multi-coating of gut bacteria with immunoglobulin (Ig)A, IgG1, IgG2, IgG3 and IgG4 in CD patients and healthy controls. Patients with severe disease exhibited distinctly higher gut bacterial IgG2-coating. IgG2-coated bacteria included both known pathogenic and non-pathogenic bacteria that co-existed in communities with two non-coated gut pathobiontsCampylobacterandMannheimia. These latter two exhibited low prevalence, rarely coincided, and were strongly enriched during disease flares in CD patients across independent and geographically distant cohorts. Since antibody-coating of gut pathobionts diminishes epithelial invasion and inflammatory processes, escape from coating by specific gut pathobionts may be a mechanism related to disease flares in the subgroup of CD patients with severe disease.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory