| Literature DB >> 35046929 |
Rahel S König1, Werner C Albrich2, Christian R Kahlert2,3, Lina Samira Bahr4,5, Ulrike Löber4,5,6, Pietro Vernazza2, Carmen Scheibenbogen7, Sofia K Forslund4,5,6,8.
Abstract
Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) or Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS) is a neglected, debilitating multi-systemic disease without diagnostic marker or therapy. Despite evidence for neurological, immunological, infectious, muscular and endocrine pathophysiological abnormalities, the etiology and a clear pathophysiology remains unclear. The gut microbiome gained much attention in the last decade with manifold implications in health and disease. Here we review the current state of knowledge on the interplay between ME/CFS and the microbiome, to identify potential diagnostic or interventional approaches, and propose areas where further research is needed. We iteratively selected and elaborated on key theories about a correlation between microbiome state and ME/CFS pathology, developing further hypotheses. Based on the literature we hypothesize that antibiotic use throughout life favours an intestinal microbiota composition which might be a risk factor for ME/CFS. Main proposed pathomechanisms include gut dysbiosis, altered gut-brain axis activity, increased gut permeability with concomitant bacterial translocation and reduced levels of short-chain-fatty acids, D-lactic acidosis, an abnormal tryptophan metabolism and low activity of the kynurenine pathway. We review options for microbiome manipulation in ME/CFS patients including probiotic and dietary interventions as well as fecal microbiota transplantations. Beyond increasing gut permeability and bacterial translocation, specific dysbiosis may modify fermentation products, affecting peripheral mitochondria. Considering the gut-brain axis we strongly suspect that the microbiome may contribute to neurocognitive impairments of ME/CFS patients. Further larger studies are needed, above all to clarify whether D-lactic acidosis and early-life antibiotic use may be part of ME/CFS etiology and what role changes in the tryptophan metabolism might play. An association between the gut microbiome and the disease ME/CFS is plausible. As causality remains unclear, we recommend longitudinal studies. Activity levels, bedridden hours and disease progression should be compared to antibiotic exposure, drug intakes and alterations in the composition of the microbiota. The therapeutic potential of fecal microbiota transfer and of targeted dietary interventions should be systematically evaluated.Entities:
Keywords: Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS); ME/CFS; Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME); antibiotics; autoimmunity; gut dysbiosis; microbiome; probiotics
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35046929 PMCID: PMC8761622 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.628741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Overview of results with the theories of possible pathomechanisms concerning the microbiome in ME/CFS.
| Mechanism | Question | Findings | Ideas for Future Research |
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| Which role does the gut composition in ME/CFS patients play, can it help to understand the disease pathomechanism and can a specific microbial signature be used for diagnosis? |
- Several studies show evidence for intestinal microbiota alterations and dysbiosis in ME/CFS patients ( - In one study researchers were able to classify 83% of the ME/CFS patients correctly based on their dysbiosis in gut and increased inflammatory markers in blood as a consequence of microbial translocation ( | Larger longitudinal studies with clear clinical criteria and considering different subgroups of patients with ME/CFS to examine if the detected dysbiosis is a cause of the disease or a consequence of patients inactivity, higher use of drugs or history of antibiotic intake. Gut microbiota composition should be assessed at the functional level. |
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| What role does a gut-brain communication in ME/CFS patients play as it is known that bacteria in the gut produce metabolites which are important for the immune system, hormonal, neural or metabolic pathway to the central nervous system? |
- An existing gut-brain communication in ME/CFS patients is supported by different studies showing improvements ○ in neurocognitive symptoms after antimicrobial and probiotic interventions ○ of symptoms after rectal infusions of cultured bacteria ( ○ of symptoms after antibiotic treatment ( | Coupled metabolomic-metagenomic studies covering metabolites involved in the gut-brain axis. |
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| As a leaky gut can trigger inflammatory changes of many chronic diseases, is there also an association with ME/CFS? What is the role of altered butyrate levels in ME/CFS patients as butyrate is associated with energy production, anti-inflammatory function, epithelial barrier functions and better fitness? |
- There is evidence for an increased intestinal permeability in ME/CFS patients: ○ Significantly elevated levels of IgA (66,7%) and IgM (40%) against the microbial translocation marker LPS of bacteria in the blood have been found and correlated with the severity of the illness ( ○ increased bacteria in the blood of ME/CFS patients followed by an exercise test ( - The endotoxin damage of Gram-negative bacteria and bacterial translocation might result in an activation of the immune response and systemic inflammation ( - Different research teams reported a reduced abundance of SCFA- (especially butyrate) producing bacteria in ME/CFS patients ( - Increased fecal SCFA levels have been found in ME/CFS patients ( | Dietary interventions, alone or coupled with pre-, pro- or synbiotic treatments, are warranted. Low efficacy may conceivably be increased by considering individual baseline. We recommend longitudinal studies ideally with pre-disease states to examine the causality between butyrate levels, medication intake and activity levels of the patients. Serum butyrate levels never have been measured directly in ME/CFS. |
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| Is there a connection between D-lactic acid producing bacteria in the gut of ME/CFS patients and their neurological symptoms, as the clinical presentation of acute D-lactic acidosis is similar? |
- Increased fecal colonization of D-lactic acid producing Gram positive bacteria have been found ( - Some researchers hypothesize that accumulation of D-lactic acid through an excess bacterial fermentation leads to it’s increase in blood and brain regions, where it causes the neurological symptoms ( - No improvement in fatigue has been seen by targeting the D-lactic acid producing bacteria with antibiotics and probiotics ( | D-lactic-acid levels should be directly measured in serum of ME/CFS patients and correlated with symptoms. |
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| What is the role of the enzyme idoleamine-2, 3-dioxygenase (IDO) in ME/CFS, as IDO plays an important role in regulations and suppressing immune activation in chronic infections and tryptophan is known to be metabolized by gut microbiota? |
- The symptoms of an increased IDO activity (resulting in a depletion of tryptophan and generation of kynurenine), are similar to some ME/CFS symptoms. An interventional study showed that the mechanism might play a more important role in the initiation of the disease than during the established disease ( - Genes of IDO isoforms have been found to be mutated. Therefore a different hypothesis is, that mutations in IDO result in the opposite with low kynurenine levels and an accumulation of tryptophan, leading to the typical pathological steady state and clinical presentation of ME/CFS ( | Investigating variability in serotonin pathway metabolite levels in ME/CFS, and their changes under dietary and pharmaceutical interventions. |
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| Is there a correlation between antibiotic use and the development of ME/CFS, as the first description of the disease was only after the worldwide use of antibiotics and it is known that antibiotic use in early life disturbs the microbiome and leads to a higher risk of several diseases? |
- A study showed that 78% of the tested non-antibiotic drugs inhibited bacterial growth ( - Antibiotics provoke the risk of D-lactate toxicity, which clinically correlates with the symptoms of ME/CFS ( - Antibiotics induce ROS and lead to oxidative stress by damaging not only bacterial cells, but also mitochondrial components ( - However, benefits in some symptoms of ME/CFS patients were also seen after treatment with antibiotics. | Antibiotic intake, in the first years of life but also later life exposure should be evaluated in ME/CFS patients to examine antibiotics as a trigger, pre-existing factor or cause. Longitudinal studies are desperately needed. |
Possible treatment affecting the microbiome in ME/CFS patients.
| Intervention | Question | Findings | Ideas for future research | |
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| What is the current knowledge on FMT in ME/CFS patients, as positive effects have been reported in other diseases? |
- A beneficial response in 70% of ME/CFS patients to a rectal infusion of a specific combination of bacteria has been reported, but all patients suffered from gastrointestinal symptoms ( - Massive improvement, also concerning energy levels of the patients, have been seen in patients undergoing FMT, also comparing to probiotics ( | We recommend larger studies with more patients and at different stages of the disease undergoing FMT observing the energy level and other symptoms after the treatment. |
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| Are there any positive effects in the symptoms of ME/CFS by manipulating the gut microbiota of the patients? |
- Until now, there is no evidence for an amelioration of the core symptoms of ME/CFS patients through the use of probiotics, although significant changes in the gut have been observed in different probiotic studies ( | In future probiotic studies it would be interesting to take biopsies of the gut instead of taking stool samples, as well as coupling metagenomic and transcriptomic analysis. In particular interventions increasing abundance of SCFA producers should be investigated. |
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| Are different modes of fasting able to improve symptoms in ME/CFS patients? |
- Until now there is no evidence for fasting dietary or fasting mimicking interventions in ME/CFS. | Projection of findings from fasting interventions in other diseases may motivate such trials also in ME/CFS. |
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| Is Vitamin B1 and Ginseng supplementation safe and effective in ME/CFS? |
- A double-blind randomized-controlled cross-over study with 40 IBD patients suffering from severe fatigue investigated the effects of a 20-day high dose thiamine (Vitamin B1) supplementation and showed a significant treatment effect regarding fatigue ( - Oral administration of ginseng has been shown to have anti-fatigue properties in ME/CFS, MS-related fatigue and cancer-related fatigue in several blinded randomized-controlled studies ( - Acupuncture and moxibustion (traditional Chinese medicine practices) to relieve symptoms of fatigue have been extensively investigated, but study quality is partially low ( | We recommend larger scientifically rigorously randomized-controlled studies with more patients and at different stages of the disease observing fatigue symptoms after the treatment. |