Department of Internal Medicine, The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas.
Department of Pediatrics, The University of Texas Medical Branch, Galveston, Texas.
J Neurotrauma. 2020 Apr 15;37(8):1037-1051. doi: 10.1089/neu.2019.6688. Epub 2020 Jan 17.
Patients with chronic traumatic brain injury (TBI) requiring long-term, permanent care suffer a myriad of clinical symptoms (i.e., impaired cognition, fatigue, and other conditions) that persist for years beyond the acute brain injury. In addition to these comorbid clinical symptoms, chronic TBI patients exhibit altered amino acid and hormonal profiles with distinct cytokine patterns suggesting chronic inflammation. This metabolic link suggests a role of the gut-brain axis in chronic TBI. Thus, we utilized a two-site trial to investigate the role of the gut-brain axis in comorbidities of chronic TBI. The fecal microbiome profile of 22 moderate/severe TBI patients residing in permanent care facilities in Texas and California was compared to 18 healthy age-matched control subjects working within the participating facilities. Each fecal microbiome was characterized by 16S(V4) ribosomal RNA (rRNA) gene sequencing and metagenomic genome sequencing approaches followed by confirmatory full 16S rRNA gene sequencing or focused gene speciation and specific quantitative polymerase chain reaction evaluation of selected genera or species. The average chronic TBI patient fecal microbiome structure was significantly different compared to the control cohort, and these differences persisted after group stratification analysis to identify any unexpected confounders. Notably, the fecal microbiome of the chronic TBI cohort had absent or reduced spp. and spp. Conversely, bacteria in the Ruminococcaceae family were higher in abundance in TBI compared to control profiles. Previously reported hypoaminoacidemia, including significantly reduced levels of l-tryptophan, l-sarcosine, ß-alanine, and alanine, positively correlated with the reduced levels of spp. in the TBI cohort samples compared to controls. Although the sequelae of gut-brain axis disruption after TBI is not fully understood, characterizing TBI-related alterations in the fecal microbiome may provide biomarkers and therapeutic targets to address patient morbidity.
慢性创伤性脑损伤(TBI)患者需要长期、永久性护理,他们会遭受多种持续多年的临床症状(如认知障碍、疲劳和其他疾病)。除了这些合并的临床症状外,慢性 TBI 患者还表现出氨基酸和激素谱的改变,以及独特的细胞因子模式,表明存在慢性炎症。这种代谢联系表明肠道-大脑轴在慢性 TBI 中起作用。因此,我们利用双地点试验来研究肠道-大脑轴在慢性 TBI 合并症中的作用。我们将德克萨斯州和加利福尼亚州的 22 名长期居住在永久性护理设施中的中重度 TBI 患者的粪便微生物组谱与 18 名在参与设施中工作的年龄匹配的健康对照进行了比较。每个粪便微生物组均采用 16S(V4)核糖体 RNA(rRNA)基因测序和宏基因组基因组测序方法进行特征描述,随后进行确认性的全 16S rRNA 基因测序或聚焦基因分类和特定定量聚合酶链反应评估选定属或种。与对照组相比,慢性 TBI 患者粪便微生物组结构的平均差异具有统计学意义,并且这些差异在进行分组分层分析以确定任何意外混杂因素后仍然存在。值得注意的是,慢性 TBI 队列的粪便微生物组中 spp. 和 spp. 缺失或减少。相反,与对照相比,Ruminococcaceae 家族的细菌在 TBI 中更为丰富。先前报道的低氨基酸血症,包括 l-色氨酸、l-肌氨酸、β-丙氨酸和丙氨酸水平显著降低,与 TBI 队列样本中 spp. 水平降低呈正相关。尽管 TBI 后肠道-大脑轴中断的后果尚未完全了解,但描述 TBI 相关的粪便微生物组改变可能为解决患者发病率提供生物标志物和治疗靶点。