4.6 Article

Dysbiosis of gut microbiota and its correlation with dysregulation of cytokines in psoriasis patients

Journal

BMC MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12866-021-02125-1

Keywords

Psoriasis; Gut microbiome; 16S; Microbiota; Cytokines

Categories

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51707149]
  2. Basic scientific research fund of Xi'an Jiaotong University
  3. State Key Laboratory of Intense Pulsed Radiation Simulation and Effect [SKLIPR.1609]

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The gut microbiome composition in patients with psoriasis has been significantly altered, indicating a potential link between gut microbiota and psoriasis. Dysbiosis of the microbiota may induce abnormal immune responses in psoriasis.
Background Psoriasis is an inflammatory skin disease associated with multiple comorbidities and substantially diminishes patients' quality of life. The gut microbiome has become a hot topic in psoriasis as it has been shown to affect both allergy and autoimmunity diseases in recent studies. Our objective was to identify differences in the fecal microbial composition of patients with psoriasis compared with healthy individuals to unravel the microbiota profiling in this autoimmune disease. Results We collected fecal samples from 30 psoriasis patients and 30 healthy controls, sequenced them by 16S rRNA high-throughput sequencing, and identified the gut microbial composition using bioinformatic analyses including Quantitative Insights into Microbial Ecology (QIIME) and Phylogenetic Investigation of Communities by Reconstruction of Unobserved States (PICRUSt). Our results showed that different relative abundance of certain bacterial taxa between psoriasis patients and healthy individuals, including Faecalibacterium and Megamonas, were increased in patients with psoriasis. It's also implicated that many cytokines act as main effect molecules in the pathology of psoriasis. We selected the inflammation-related indicators that were abnormal in psoriasis patients and found the microbiome variations were associated with the level of them, especially interleukin-2 receptor showed a positive relationship with Phascolarctobacterium and a negative relationship with the Dialister. The relative abundance of Phascolarctobacterium and Dialister can be regard as predictors of psoriasis activity. The correlation analysis based on microbiota and Inflammation-related indicators showed that microbiota dysbiosis might induce an abnormal immune response in psoriasis. Conclusions We concluded that the gut microbiome composition in psoriasis patients has been altered markedly and provides evidence to understand the relationship between gut microbiota and psoriasis. More mechanistic experiments are needed to determine whether the differences observed in gut microbiota are the cause or consequences of psoriasis and whether the relationship between gut microbiota and cytokines was involved.

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