The metabolic potential of the paediatric-onset multiple sclerosis gut microbiome

AI Mirza, F Zhu, N Knox, JD Forbes, C Bonner… - Multiple Sclerosis and …, 2022 - Elsevier
AI Mirza, F Zhu, N Knox, JD Forbes, C Bonner, G Van Domselaar, CN Bernstein, M Graham…
Multiple Sclerosis and Related Disorders, 2022Elsevier
Background The aim of this study was to examine the gut microbiome's metabolic potential
in paediatric-onset MS patients (symptom onset< 18 years). Methods We included 17 MS
participants and 20 controls similar for sex, age, race, and stool consistency from the
Canadian Paediatric Demyelinating Disease Network study. Stool-derived gut metagenome
gene abundances were used to estimate relative abundances and turnover scores of
individual microbial metabolites and the composition and diversity of carbohydrate-active …
Background
The aim of this study was to examine the gut microbiome's metabolic potential in paediatric-onset MS patients (symptom onset <18 years).
Methods
We included 17 MS participants and 20 controls similar for sex, age, race, and stool consistency from the Canadian Paediatric Demyelinating Disease Network study. Stool-derived gut metagenome gene abundances were used to estimate relative abundances and turnover scores of individual microbial metabolites and the composition and diversity of carbohydrate-active enzymes (CAZymes). MS participants and controls were compared using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test, as were the disease-modifying drug (DMD) exposed and naïve MS participants.
Results
The median age(s) at MS symptom onset=16.1 years (interquartile range [IQR]=1.7), and at stool sample procurement=16.9/15.8 years (IQR=2.0/1.4), for the MS participants/controls. Most MS and control participants were girls (80–82%). Five (29%) of the MS participants had never been exposed to a DMD pre-stool sample and 12 (71%) had (7 to beta-interferon and 5 glatiramer acetate). While the relative abundance of metabolites did not differ between MS participants and controls, turnover scores did. MS participants had a greater potential to metabolize lipopolysaccharides than controls (score difference=1.6E-04, p = 0.034) but lower potential to metabolize peptidoglycan molecules and starch (score differences<2.2E-02, p<0.040). Further, although CAZymes diversity did not differ (p>0.050), starch-degrading subfamilies were underrepresented in MS participants versus controls (relative abundance differences >-0.34, p<0.040) and in the DMD exposed verses DMD naïve MS participants (relative abundance differences>-0.20, p<0.049).
Conclusion
Paediatric-onset MS participants had an altered gut microbiome-related metabolic potential compared to controls, including higher breakdown of lipopolysaccharide molecules, but lower resistant starch metabolism.
Elsevier