高雄市生物科技發展協會|http://www.khba.org.tw
會員登入
記住帳號 自動登入
會員名錄
各式辦法
下載專區
留言板
您目前的位置:首頁 / 活動與新訊
A Bacterial Culprit for Rheumatoid Arthritis
活動日期:2023.09.05
2023.09.05  

A Bacterial Culprit for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Scientists identified a species of Subdoligranulum that may drive disease.

Hannah ThomasyHannah Thomasy, PhD, Drug Discovery News


 

https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/a-bacterial-culprit-for-rheumatoid-arthritis-71088

 

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a debilitating autoimmune condition that affects millions of people across the globe (1). The ultimate cause of RA is largely mysterious. While researchers have long suspected that the microbiome influenced development of the disease, the specific microbe (or microbes) has eluded identification.

Now, in a recent Science Translational Medicine paper, researchers reported a strain of Subdoligranulum bacteria that may drive RA development (2). Some people at risk for the disease have antibodies against this bacteria, and Subdoligranulum activation of T cells was more prevalent in people with RA than in healthy controls. Perhaps even more intriguingly, mice given this bacterium developed a condition similar to human RA.

Identifying this bacterium was no simple task. First, the research team, a collaboration between scientists at the University of Colorado, Stanford University, and the Benaroya Research Institute, screened blood donated by people at risk for RA or with early-stage RA for RA-related autoantibodies.

Then researchers tested whether any of these autoantibodies also targeted human intestinal bacteria. They mixed the antibodies with bacteria from stool samples donated by healthy people and people with RA. They then sequenced the bacterial species to which the autoantibodies attached. These RA antibodies cross-reacted with many species of bacteria, largely from Lachnospiraceae or Ruminococcaceae, two closely related families.

To study these species in more detail, researchers cultured bacteria from the stool of an individual who had high levels of these two bacterial families present. Two types of Subdoligranulum bacteria, which they called isolates 1 and 7, emerged as potential candidates for driving RA development. Compared to isolate 1, isolate 7 was a more potent activator of T cells in blood from RA patients.

The reason I think this line of research is particularly exciting is that it could very well get at an actual beginning of the disease. 
- Rabi Upadhyay, NYU Grossman School of Medicine

To find out if isolate 7 bacteria actually caused disease, scientists fed the bacteria to mice. Kristine Kuhn, a study coauthor and rheumatologist at the University of Colorado, said that she didn’t expect anything to happen when the team gave the mice the bacteria without another agent to disturb the immune system.

“We thought we were going to have to rev their immune systems up with an adjuvant or something,” said Kuhn. “Meagan [Chriswell, another author] was monitoring the mice, making sure that they had stable colonization. After a couple of weeks — I happened to be out of town — she called me up and she said, ‘Kristine, you'll never believe this, but the mice are getting swollen paws.” This is similar to the swollen hand and finger joints experienced by people with RA.

While other bacteria have previously been associated with human RA, Subdoligranulum is so far unique in its ability to cause RA-like symptoms in mice without the addition of another immune insult (3).

The similarities between the mice and human RA patients extended beyond what could be seen with the naked eye. “There were antibodies getting into the joints, much like we see in rheumatoid arthritis,” said Kuhn. “So, we started to profile the antibodies that were in the serum of the mice and we found that a lot of those antibodies targeted the same proteins that are targeted in rheumatoid arthritis.”

Rabi Upadhyay, a medical oncologist who studies the microbiome, immunity, and cancer at the NYU Grossman School of Medicine and was not involved in this work, said that while this study convincingly demonstrated that this species could produce an RA-like condition in mice, it may be too soon to pin all the blame on Subdoligranulum alone, since the study didn’t necessarily rule out other species.

“It's hard to know how big of a player this specific isolate is,” he said. “It could be the dominant player, and that's why they came across it first. But it could be that if they went back and did larger screens, that they would come up with more — that [Subdoligranulum] would be just one of many.”

In keeping with this, the researchers only found this Subdoligranulum strain in 16.7 percent of people at risk or with early-stage RA, indicating that this strain is likely not the sole driver of disease.

Nevertheless, Upadhyay said that it’s still an exciting study. Currently, there are no therapies that can prevent or cure the disease, and the immunosuppressant treatments that alleviate symptoms can have dangerous side effects.

“The reason I think this line of research is particularly exciting is that it could very well get at an actual beginning of the disease, so that we could design therapeutics to perturb the colonization of bacteria… to see whether you can prevent a percentage of disease prevalence by getting rid of colonization. And that would totally change the types of therapies that a rheumatologist could use.”

References

  1. Cross, M. et al. The global burden of rheumatoid arthritis: estimates from the global burden of disease 2010 study. Ann Rheum Dis  73, 1316–1322 (2014).
  2. Chriswell, M. E. et al. Clonal IgA and IgG autoantibodies from individuals at risk for rheumatoid arthritis identify an arthritogenic strain of Subdoligranulum. Science Translational Medicine  14, eabn5166 (2022).
  3. Scher, J. U. et al. Expansion of intestinal Prevotella copri correlates with enhanced susceptibility to arthritis. eLife  2, e01202 (2013).
共有310筆資料 頁數: 第4頁(共16頁)
編號 標題 新增日期
1 獨家》國衛院新研究:阿茲海默症乙型類澱粉蛋白會加速新冠病毒.. 2021.11.29
2 《Science》憂鬱症關鍵腦部受體GPR158結構終破解! 可望成治療.. 2021.11.25
3 國衛院領先全球》全身性紅斑狼瘡 致病源頭找到了 2021.11.09
4 Spiny Mice Appear to Regenerate Damaged Kidneys 2021.11.05
5 健康網》喜好口味一直變? 研究:味覺隨年紀增加而下降 2021.10.29
6 Delta後代傳播力更強! 英示警:亞系變異株「AY.4.2」崛起 2021.10.27
7 Red Blood Cells Activate Innate Immune System 2021.10.22
8 Mice that Survive Infection Pass on Stronger Immunit 2021.10.20
9 How Commensal Gut Bacteria Keep Pathogens in Check 2021.10.15
10 Repurposed Drug Reverses Signs of Alzheimer’s in Mice, Hu.. 2021.10.13
11 獨家》糖尿病可治癒!中研院團隊新發現有機會取代胰島素 2021.09.24
12 SARS-CoV-2’s Wide-Ranging Effects on the Body 2021.09.22
13 A Surge in Pandemic Research Shines a Spotlight on Preprints 2021.09.17
14 去年國人10大死因出爐 癌症、心臟病、肺炎仍居前三名 2021.06.18
15 中藥治武肺 清冠一號獲核准 2021.05.19
16 Brain’s Lymphatic System Tied to Alzheimer’s Symptoms in.. 2021.05.10
17 動脈硬化後還能逆轉嗎?美國研究:1項運動天天做,失智風險都.. 2021.04.08
18 癌王曙光 新胜肽分子阻轉移 2021.03.05
19 U.S. FDA Expands Approval of Pfizer’s LORBRENA® as F.. 2021.03.05
20 AI大數據建功 舊藥抗武肺 效力強30倍 2021.02.24
上一頁  1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16  下一頁
版權所有©2006 高雄市生物科技發展協會 所有文字、資料禁止轉用
地址:高雄市中正一路120號14樓之3 TEL:(07)591-9569 / FAX:(07)591-9018 / e-mail: khba.tw@gmail.com
累積進站人數:2896837