New York University School of Medicine and Hospital for Joint Diseases, New York, New York.
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York.
Arthritis Rheumatol. 2018 Feb;70(2):242-254. doi: 10.1002/art.40359. Epub 2018 Jan 3.
Reactive arthritis (ReA) is an inflammatory disorder occurring several weeks after gastrointestinal or genitourinary tract infections. HLA-B27 positivity is considered a risk factor, although it is not necessarily predictive of disease incidence. Among nongenetic factors, the intestinal microbiome may play a role in disease susceptibility. The objective of this study was to characterize the gut microbiota and host gene interactions in ReA and postinfectious spondyloarthritis.
Adult subjects with peripheral spondyloarthritis and control subjects with preceding infections who did not develop arthritis were prospectively recruited from a geographic region with a high prevalence of ReA. Clinical variables, HLA status, and 16S ribosomal RNA gene sequencing of intestinal microbiota were analyzed.
Subjects with ReA showed no significant differences from controls in gut bacterial richness or diversity. However, there was a significantly higher abundance of Erwinia and Pseudomonas and an increased prevalence of typical enteropathogens associated with ReA. Subjects with ultrasound evidence of enthesitis were enriched in Campylobacter, while subjects with uveitis and radiographic sacroiliitis were enriched in Erwinia and unclassified Ruminococcaceae, respectively; both were enriched in Dialister. Host genetics, particularly HLA-A24, were associated with differences in gut microbiota diversity irrespective of disease status. We identified several co-occurring taxa that were also predictive of HLA-A24 status.
This is the first culture-independent study characterizing the gut microbial community in postinfectious arthritis. Although bacterial factors correlated with disease presence and clinical features of ReA, host genetics also appeared to be a major independent driver of intestinal community composition. Understanding of these gut microbiota-host genetic relationships may further clarify the pathogenesis of postinfectious spondyloarthritides.
反应性关节炎(ReA)是一种炎症性疾病,发生在胃肠道或泌尿生殖道感染后数周。HLA-B27 阳性被认为是一个危险因素,但它并不一定预测疾病的发病率。在非遗传因素中,肠道微生物组可能在疾病易感性中起作用。本研究的目的是描述反应性关节炎和感染后脊柱关节炎中的肠道微生物群和宿主基因相互作用。
从一个反应性关节炎高发地区前瞻性招募了患有外周脊柱关节炎的成年患者和有前驱感染但未发生关节炎的对照患者。分析了临床变量、HLA 状态和肠道微生物群 16S 核糖体 RNA 基因测序。
ReA 组与对照组的肠道细菌丰富度或多样性无显著差异。然而,Erwinia 和 Pseudomonas 的丰度明显较高,与 ReA 相关的典型肠道病原体的患病率也增加。有超声证据的附着点炎患者富集了 Campylobacter,而患有虹膜炎和放射性骶髂关节炎的患者分别富集了 Erwinia 和未分类的 Ruminococcaceae,两者均富集了 Dialister。宿主遗传学,特别是 HLA-A24,与肠道微生物多样性的差异有关,而与疾病状态无关。我们确定了几个共同存在的分类群,它们也可以预测 HLA-A24 状态。
这是第一项描述感染后关节炎肠道微生物群落的非培养依赖性研究。尽管细菌因素与 ReA 的存在和临床特征相关,但宿主遗传学似乎也是肠道群落组成的主要独立驱动因素。对这些肠道微生物群-宿主遗传关系的理解可能进一步阐明感染后脊柱关节炎的发病机制。