SUMMARY The gut microbiota influences development 1 – 3 and homeostasis 4 – 7 of the mammalian immune system, and is associated with human inflammatory- 8 and immune diseases 9 , 10 as well as patients’ responses to immunotherapy 11 – 14 . Still, our understanding of how gut bacteria modulate the immune system remains limited, particularly in humans where a lack of deliberate manipulations makes inference challenging. Here we study hundreds of hospitalized—and closely monitored—cancer patients receiving hematopoietic cell transplantation as they recover from chemotherapy and stem cell engraftment. This aggressive treatment causes large shifts in both circulatory immune cell and microbiota populations, allowing the relationships between the two to be studied simultaneously. Analysis of observed daily changes in circulating neutrophil, lymphocyte and monocyte counts and >10,000 longitudinal microbiota samples from patients revealed consistent associations between gut bacteria and immune cell dynamics. High-resolution clinical metadata and Bayesian inference allowed us to compare the effects of bacterial genera relative to those of immunomodulatory medications, revealing a considerable influence of the gut microbiota—in concert and over time—on systemic immune cell dynamics. Our analysis establishes and quantifies the link between the gut microbiota and the human immune system, with implications for microbiota-driven modulation of immunity.
Disruption of intestinal microbial communities appears to underlie many human illnesses, but the mechanisms that promote this dysbiosis and its adverse consequences are poorly understood. In patients who received allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT), we describe a high incidence of enterococcal expansion, which was associated with graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) and mortality. We found that Enterococcus also expands in the mouse gastrointestinal tract after allo-HCT and exacerbates disease severity in gnotobiotic models. Enterococcus growth is dependent on the disaccharide lactose, and dietary lactose depletion attenuates Enterococcus outgrowth and reduces the severity of GVHD in mice. Allo-HCT patients carrying lactose-nonabsorber genotypes showed compromised clearance of postantibiotic Enterococcus domination. We report lactose as a common nutrient that drives expansion of a commensal bacterium that exacerbates an intestinal and systemic inflammatory disease.
We have previously described clinically relevant reductions in fecal microbiota diversity of patients undergoing allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation (allo-HCT). Recipients of high-dose chemotherapy and autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation (auto-HCT) incur similar antibiotic exposures and nutritional alterations. To characterize the fecal microbiota in the auto-HCT population, we analyzed 1,161 fecal samples collected from 534 adult recipients of auto-HCT for lymphoma, myeloma and amyloidosis in an observational study conducted at two transplant centers in the United States. Using 16S ribosomal gene sequencing, we assessed fecal microbiota diversity as measured by the inverse Simpson index, and composition. At both centers, early pre-transplant fecal microbiota diversity was lower than in healthy control subjects and decreased further during the course of transplantation. Loss of diversity and domination by specific bacterial taxa occurred during auto-HCT in patterns similar to allo-HCT. Above-median fecal intestinal diversity in the peri-engraftment period was associated with decreased risk of death or progression (PFS HR 0.46 [95% CI, 0.26-0.82], P=0.008), adjusting for disease and disease status. This suggests that further investigation into the health of the intestinal microbiota in auto-HCT patients and post-transplant outcomes should be undertaken.
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