Microbial translocation revisited: targeting the endotoxic potential of gut microbes in HIV-infected individuals.

AIDS(2019)

引用 9|浏览17
暂无评分
摘要
Objective: Translocation of microbial products such as lipopolysaccharides (LPS) from the gut may contribute to chronic inflammation in HIV-infected individuals. Recent studies indicate that differences in degree of acylation of gut-bacterial-derived LPS may explain variable immune effects, with hexa-acylated rather than penta-acylated LPS having proi nflammatory capacity. We investigated whether the degree of acylation of gut-derived LPS associates with systemic inflammation, and the potential effect of probiotic intervention. Methods: Gut microbiota profiles from a probiotics intervention were investigated and validated in a cohort of HIV-infected individuals commencing antiretroviral therapy. The PiCRUSt software was used to predict overall functional capacity of the microbiota and in-house bioinformatics to distinguish between bacteria producing hexa-acylated and penta-acylated LPS. Results and conclusion: HIV-infected individuals with the highest ratio of proinflammatory hexa-acylated LPS to noninflammatory penta-acylated LPS-producing bacteria exhibited increased levels of systemic inflammation (neopterin, P < 0.001) and tryptophan catabolism (kynurenine/tryptophan ratio, P = 0.01), indicating a link between proinflammatory LPS, tryptophan catabolism and inflammation. After probiotics for 8 weeks, there was a decrease in Gram-negative bacteria (P = 0.01), related primarily to a reduction in bacteria producing penta-acylated LPS (P = 0.01), but not hexa-acylated LPS. The reduction in Gram-negative bacteria correlated positively with decreased plasma LPS (r = 0.72), mainly related to a reduction in bacteria producing noninflammatory penta-acylated LPS (r = 0.58). Notably, gut bacteria producing hexa-acylated LPS were outnumbered by penta-acylated LPS with a factor of 25 in HIV-infected individuals. Further studies are warranted to determine whether microbes producing hexa-acylated LPS might be a more relevant trigger of systemic inflammation compared with plasma LPS captured by the existing limulus assay. Copyright (C) 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
更多
查看译文
关键词
endotoxins,gastrointestinal microbiome,HIV,inflammation,limulus test,lipopolysaccharides,probiotics
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要