失调
免疫学
普氏粪杆菌
炎症
微生物群
猿猴免疫缺陷病毒
肠道菌群
生物
全身炎症
免疫系统
生物信息学
作者
Ceylan Tanes,Edith Walker,Nadia Slisarenko,Giovanni L. Gerrets,Brooke Grasperge,Xuebin Qin,S. Michal Jazwinski,Frederic D. Bushman,Kyle Bittinger,Namita Rout
出处
期刊:Viruses
[Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute]
日期:2021-08-08
卷期号:13 (8): 1567-1567
被引量:5
摘要
Gut dysbiosis is a common feature associated with the chronic inflammation of HIV infection. Toward understanding the interplay of chronic treated HIV infection, dysbiosis, and systemic inflammation, we investigated longitudinal fecal microbiome changes and plasma inflammatory markers in the nonhuman primate model. Following simian immunodeficiency virus (SIV) infection in rhesus macaques, significant changes were observed in several members of the phylum Firmicutes along with an increase in Bacteroidetes. Viral suppression with antiretroviral therapy (ART) resulted in an early but partial recovery of compositional changes and butyrate producing genes in the gut microbiome. Over the course of chronic SIV infection and long-term ART, however, the specific loss of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii and Treponema succinifaciens significantly correlated with an increase in plasma inflammatory cytokines including IL-6, G-CSF, I-TAC, and MIG. Further, the loss of T. succinifaciens correlated with an increase in circulating biomarkers of gut epithelial barrier damage (IFABP) and microbial translocation (LBP and sCD14). As F. prausnitzii and T. succinifaciens are major short-chain fatty acid producing bacteria, their sustained loss during chronic SV-ART may contribute to gut inflammation and metabolic alterations despite effective long-term control of viremia. A better understanding of the correlations between the anti-inflammatory bacterial community and healthy gut barrier functions in the setting of long-term ART may have a major impact on the clinical management of inflammatory comorbidities in HIV-infected individuals.
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