Login / Signup

Bacteroides ovatus alleviates dysbiotic microbiota-induced intestinal graft-versus-host disease.

Robert R JenqEiko HayaseTomo HayaseAkash MukherjeeStuart StinsonMohamed JamalMiriam OrtegaChristopher SanchezSaira AhmedJennifer KarmouchChia-Chi ChangIvonne FloresLauren McDanielAlexandria BrownRawan El-HimriValerie ChapaLin TanBao TranDung PhamTaylor HalseyYimei JinWen-Bin TsaiRishika PrasadIsrael GloverNadim AjamiJennifer A WargoSamuel ShelburnePablo C OkhuysenChen LiuStephanie FowlerMargaret ConnerChristine B PetersonGabriela RondonJeffrey J MolldremRichard ChamplinElizabeth ShpallPhilip L LorenziRohtesh MehtaEric C MartensAmin Alousi
Published in: Research square (2023)
Acute gastrointestinal intestinal GVHD (aGI-GVHD) is a serious complication of allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, and the intestinal microbiota is known to impact on its severity. However, an association between treatment response of aGI-GVHD and the intestinal microbiota has not been well-studied. In a cohort of patients with aGI-GVHD (n=37), we found that non-response to standard therapy with corticosteroids was associated with prior treatment with carbapenem antibiotics and loss of Bacteroides ovatus from the microbiome. In a mouse model of carbapenem-aggravated GVHD, introducing Bacteroides ovatus reduced severity of GVHD and improved survival. Bacteroides ovatus reduced degradation of colonic mucus by another intestinal commensal, Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron, via its ability to metabolize dietary polysaccharides into monosaccharides, which then inhibit mucus degradation by Bacteroides thetaiotaomicron and reduce GVHD-related mortality.
Keyphrases