Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/101534
Title: Rectal microbiota are coupled with altered cytokine production capacity following community-acquired pneumonia hospitalization
Authors: Kullberg, Robert F.J.
Brands, Xanthe
Klarenbeek, Augustijn M.
Butler, Joe M.
Otto, Natasja A.
Faber, Daniël R.
Scicluna, Brendon P.
Poll, Tom van der
Joost Wiersinga, W.
Haak, Bastiaan W.
Keywords: Immunology
Microbiology -- Case studies
Cytokines -- Immunology
Community-acquired pneumonia
Issue Date: 2022
Publisher: Cell Press
Citation: Kullberg, R. F., Brands, X., Klarenbeek, A. M., Butler, J. M., Otto, N. A., Faber, D. R., ... & Haak, B. W. (2022). Rectal microbiota are coupled with altered cytokine production capacity following community-acquired pneumonia hospitalization. Iscience, 25(8), 104740.
Abstract: Human studies describing the immunomodulatory role of the intestinal microbiota in systemic infections are lacking. Here, we sought to relate microbiota profiles from 115 patients with community-acquired pneumonia (CAP), both on hospital admission and following discharge, to concurrent circulating monocyte and neutrophil function. Rectal microbiota composition did not explain variation in cytokine responses in acute CAP (median 0%, IQR 0.0%-1.9%), but did one month following hospitalization (median 4.1%, IQR 0.0%-6.6%, p = 0.0035). Gene expression analysis of monocytes showed that undisrupted microbiota profiles following hospitalization were associated with upregulated interferon, interleukin-10, and G-protein-coupled-receptor-ligand-binding pathways. While CAP is characterized by profoundly distorted gut microbiota, the effects of these disruptions on cytokine responses and transcriptional profiles during acute infection were absent or modest. However, rectal microbiota were related to altered cytokine responses one month following CAP hospitalization, which may provide insights into potential mechanisms contributing to the high risk of recurrent infections following hospitalization.
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/101534
Appears in Collections:Scholarly Works - FacHScABS



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