Pronounced gut microbiota signatures in patients with JAK2V617F-positive essential thrombocythemia

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  • Christina Schjellerup Eickhardt-Dalbøge
  • Anna Cäcilia Ingham
  • Henrik V Nielsen
  • Kurt Fuursted
  • Christen Rune Stensvold
  • Lee O'Brien Andersen
  • Larsen, Morten Kranker
  • Lasse Kjær
  • Sarah Friis Christensen
  • Trine Alma Knudsen
  • Vibe Skov
  • Ellervik, Christina
  • Lars Rønn Olsen
  • Hasselbalch, Hans K
  • Jens Jørgen Elmer Christensen
  • Xiaohui Chen Nielsen
Essential thrombocythemia (ET) is part of the Philadelphia chromosome-negative myeloproliferative neoplasms. It is characterized by an increased risk of thromboembolic events and also to a certain degree hypermetabolic symptoms. The gut microbiota is an important initiator of hematopoiesis and regulation of the immune system, but in patients with ET, where inflammation is a hallmark of the disease, it is vastly unexplored. In this study, we compared the gut microbiota via amplicon-based 16S rRNA gene sequencing of the V3–V4 region in 54 patients with ET according to mutation status Janus-kinase 2 (JAK2V617F)-positive vs JAK2V617F-negative patients with ET, and in 42 healthy controls (HCs). Gut microbiota richness was higher in patients with ET (median-observed richness, 283.5; range, 75–535) compared with HCs (median-observed richness, 191.5; range, 111–300; P < 0.001). Patients with ET had a different overall bacterial composition (beta diversity) than HCs (analysis of similarities [ANOSIM]; R = 0.063, P = 0.004). Patients with ET had a significantly lower relative abundance of taxa within the Firmicutes phylum compared with HCs (51% vs 59%, P = 0.03), and within that phylum, patients with ET also had a lower relative abundance of the genus Faecalibacterium (8% vs 15%, P < 0.001), an important immunoregulative bacterium. The microbiota signatures were more pronounced in patients harboring the JAK2V617F mutation, and highly similar to patients with polycythemia vera as previously described. These findings suggest that patients with ET may have an altered immune regulation; however, whether this dysregulation is induced in part by, or is itself inducing, an altered gut microbiota remains to be investigated.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
Artikelnummere0066223
TidsskriftMicrobiology Spectrum
Vol/bind11
Udgave nummer5
Antal sider19
ISSN2165-0497
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2023

ID: 370582124