| Literature DB >> 25140823 |
Phoebe Lin1, Mary Bach2, Mark Asquith3, Aaron Y Lee4, Lakshmi Akileswaran5, Patrick Stauffer1, Sean Davin1, Yuzhen Pan1, Eric D Cambronne6, Martha Dorris7, Justine W Debelius8, Christian L Lauber8, Gail Ackermann8, Yoshiki V Baeza8, Tejpal Gill9, Rob Knight10, Robert A Colbert9, Joel D Taurog7, Russell N Van Gelder5, James T Rosenbaum11.
Abstract
The HLA-B27 gene is a major risk factor for clinical diseases including ankylosing spondylitis, acute anterior uveitis, reactive arthritis, and psoriatic arthritis, but its mechanism of risk enhancement is not completely understood. The gut microbiome has recently been shown to influence several HLA-linked diseases. However, the role of HLA-B27 in shaping the gut microbiome has not been previously investigated. In this study, we characterize the differences in the gut microbiota mediated by the presence of the HLA-B27 gene. We identified differences in the cecal microbiota of Lewis rats transgenic for HLA-B27 and human β2-microglobulin (hβ2m), compared with wild-type Lewis rats, using biome representational in situ karyotyping (BRISK) and 16S rRNA gene sequencing. 16S sequencing revealed significant differences between transgenic animals and wild type animals by principal coordinates analysis. Further analysis of the data set revealed an increase in Prevotella spp. and a decrease in Rikenellaceae relative abundance in the transgenic animals compared to the wild type animals. By BRISK analysis, species-specific differences included an increase in Bacteroides vulgatus abundance in HLA-B27/hβ2m and hβ2m compared to wild type rats. The finding that HLA-B27 is associated with altered cecal microbiota has not been shown before and can potentially provide a better understanding of the clinical diseases associated with this gene.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25140823 PMCID: PMC4139385 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0105684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
HLA-B27/hβ2m transgenic rat lines.
| Line | Transgene locus zygosity | Transgene scopies | ||
| HLA-B27 | hβ2m | HLA-B7 | ||
| 21–3 | hemi- | 20 | 15 | – |
| homo- | 40 | 30 | – | |
| 283–2 | hemi- | 0 | 35 | – |
| homo- | 0 | 70 | – | |
| 21–3x283–2 | hemi- x hemi- | 20 | 50 | – |
| 33–3 | homo- | 55 | 66 | – |
| 120–4 | homo- | – | 10 | 52 |
Adapted from [35].
Rat cohorts used in experiments.
| Cohort | Housing | Gender/Genotype | Samples obtained |
| 1 | co-housed | Male/6 WT, 7 (21–3x283–2)F1 | whole cecum |
| separately housed | Male/3 WT | ||
| 2 | co-housed | Male/6 WT, 6 (21–3x283–2)F1 | cecal lumen, cecal mucosa |
| 3 | separately housed by genotype | Male/4 WT, 4 (21–3x283–2)F1, 4 (283–2) | cecal lumen, cecal mucosa |
| Female/4 WT, 4 (21–3x283–2)F1, 4 (283–2) | |||
| Control cohort | Depends on age of cohort | Male/15 WT, 15 (33–3), 15 (120–4) | cecal lumen, cecal mucosa |
| Female/11 WT, 13 (33–3), 13 (120–4) |
WT: wild type; see Table 1 for genotype designations.
Figure 116S rRNA gene sequencing principal coordinates analysis from non-co-housed rats shows significant differences in cecal microbiota between genotypes.
A. Cecal lumen samples from cohort 3; B, Cecal mucosa samples from cohort 3; C, Phylum-level analysis from cecum lumen samples; D, Phylum-level analysis from cecum mucosa samples. WT: wild type rats; B2M: hβ2 microglobulin; B27/B2M: HLA-B27/hβ2 microglobulin transgenic rats.
HLA-B27 transgenic animals have significant alterations in gut microbiota by 16s rDNA sequencing.
| Animal group comparison | Permanova analysis, p value | n from each group | |
| Co-housed animals | Whole cecum (WT vs B27/B2M)* | 1.9066, 0.006 | 6 vs 7 |
| Cecal mucosa (WT vs B27/B2M) | 1.2121, 0.1688 | 6 vs 6 | |
| Cecal lumen (WT vs B27/B2M) | 1.0113, 0.4266 | 6 vs 6 | |
| Non-co-housed animals | Cecal lumen (WT vs B27/B2M vs B2M)* | 3.4031, 0.001 | 7 vs 8 vs 7 |
| Cecal lumen (WT vs B27/B2M)* | 4.7903, 0.001 | 7 vs 8 | |
| Cecal lumen (WT vs B2M)* | 5.1028, 0.001 | 7 vs 7 | |
| Cecal lumen (B27/B2M vs B2M) | 0.76438, 0.7652 | 8 vs 7 | |
| Cecal mucosa (WT vs B27/B2M vs B2M)* | 2.4418, 0.001 | 7 vs 8 vs 7 | |
| Cecal mucosa (WT vs B27/B2M)* | 3.1632, 0.002 | 7 vs 8 | |
| Cecal mucosa (WT vs B2M)* | 3.0912, 0.001 | 7 vs 7 | |
| Cecal mucosa (B27/B2M vs B2M) | 1.0951, 0.3017 | 8 vs 7 |
WT: wild-type Lewis rats; B27/B2M: (21–3×283–2)F1 HLA-B27/hβ2m transgenic Lewis rats; B2M: 283–2 hβ2m expressing transgenic rats; * designates p<0.05.
Figure 2Genus level analysis differences from A, cecal lumen specimens, and B, cecal mucosal samples from cohort 3.
Figure 3Principal coordinates analysis from combined cecal lumen and cecal mucosa samples from cohort 3.
Figure 4BRISK analysis of whole cecum samples from cohort 1 shows microbial diversity differences on a species level between HLA-B27/hβ2m animals and co-housed wild type animals.
A. Each line on the heat map represents a different bacterial species and the color code represents the relative abundance of that organism, with yellow indicating the highest abundance. B, Specific species differences are highlighted, with a black dot indicating statistically significant differences.
Figure 5Relative differences in Bacteroides vulgatus and Akkermansia muciniphila shown by A, quantitative PCR using the 16S rRNA gene as a reference, and B, by traditional PCR using whole cecum samples in cohort 1.