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Diet-derived metabolites and mucus link the gut microbiome to fever after cytotoxic cancer treatment.

Authors :
Schwabkey ZI
Wiesnoski DH
Chang CC
Tsai WB
Pham D
Ahmed SS
Hayase T
Ortega Turrubiates MR
El-Himri RK
Sanchez CA
Hayase E
Frenk Oquendo AC
Miyama T
Halsey TM
Heckel BE
Brown AN
Jin Y
Raybaud M
Prasad R
Flores I
McDaniel L
Chapa V
Lorenzi PL
Warmoes MO
Tan L
Swennes AG
Fowler S
Conner M
McHugh K
Graf T
Jensen VB
Peterson CB
Do KA
Zhang L
Shi Y
Wang Y
Galloway-Pena JR
Okhuysen PC
Daniel-MacDougall CR
Shono Y
Burgos da Silva M
Peled JU
van den Brink MRM
Ajami N
Wargo JA
Reddy P
Valdivia RH
Davey L
Rondon G
Srour SA
Mehta RS
Alousi AM
Shpall EJ
Champlin RE
Shelburne SA
Molldrem JJ
Jamal MA
Karmouch JL
Jenq RR
Source :
Science translational medicine [Sci Transl Med] 2022 Nov 16; Vol. 14 (671), pp. eabo3445. Date of Electronic Publication: 2022 Nov 16.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Not all patients with cancer and severe neutropenia develop fever, and the fecal microbiome may play a role. In a single-center study of patients undergoing hematopoietic cell transplant ( n  = 119), the fecal microbiome was characterized at onset of severe neutropenia. A total of 63 patients (53%) developed a subsequent fever, and their fecal microbiome displayed increased relative abundances of Akkermansia muciniphila , a species of mucin-degrading bacteria ( P  = 0.006, corrected for multiple comparisons). Two therapies that induce neutropenia, irradiation and melphalan, similarly expanded A. muciniphila and additionally thinned the colonic mucus layer in mice. Caloric restriction of unirradiated mice also expanded A. muciniphila and thinned the colonic mucus layer. Antibiotic treatment to eradicate A. muciniphila before caloric restriction preserved colonic mucus, whereas A. muciniphila reintroduction restored mucus thinning. Caloric restriction of unirradiated mice raised colonic luminal pH and reduced acetate, propionate, and butyrate. Culturing A. muciniphila in vitro with propionate reduced utilization of mucin as well as of fucose. Treating irradiated mice with an antibiotic targeting A. muciniphila or propionate preserved the mucus layer, suppressed translocation of flagellin, reduced inflammatory cytokines in the colon, and improved thermoregulation. These results suggest that diet, metabolites, and colonic mucus link the microbiome to neutropenic fever and may guide future microbiome-based preventive strategies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1946-6242
Volume :
14
Issue :
671
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Science translational medicine
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36383683
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1126/scitranslmed.abo3445