4.6 Article

The effects of prebiotics on microbial dysbiosis, butyrate production and immunity in HIV-infected subjects

Journal

MUCOSAL IMMUNOLOGY
Volume 10, Issue 5, Pages 1279-1293

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/mi.2016.122

Keywords

-

Categories

Funding

  1. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (Plan Estatal de I+D+i) [PI13/00438, PIE14/00045, PI15/00345]
  2. European Development Regional Fund A way to achieve Europe'' (ERDF)
  3. Health Research Institute of University Hospital Clinico San Carlos, Generalitat Valenciana'' [Prometeo/2009/092]
  4. Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [SAF2012-31187, CTQ2014-55279-R]
  5. Redes Tematicas de Investigacion en SIDA (ISCIII RETIC) [RD12/0017/0029, RD12/0017/0037, RIS-EST37]
  6. Junta de Andalucia (Proyecto de Excelencia) [CTS-6313]
  7. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Contratos Juan Rodes) [ECC/1051/2013]
  8. Ayudas Predoctorales de Formacion en Investigacion en Salud'' from Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Spain
  9. CONACYT-SECITI fellowship, Mexico
  10. European Society of Pediatric Infectious Diseases (ESPID)

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Altered interactions between the gut mucosa and bacteria during HIV infection seem to contribute to chronic immune dysfunction. A deeper understanding of how nutritional interventions could ameliorate gut dysbiosis is needed. Forty-four subjects, including 12 HIV+ viremic untreated (VU) patients, 23 antiretroviral therapy-treated (ART(+)) virally suppressed patients (15 immunological responders and 8 non-responders) and 9 HIV- controls (HIV-), were blindly randomized to receive either prebiotics (scGOS/lcFOS/glutamine) or placebo (34/10) over 6 weeks in this pilot study. We assessed fecal microbiota composition using deep 16S rRNA gene sequencing and several immunological and genetic markers involved in HIV immunopathogenesis. The short dietary supplementation attenuated HIV-associated dysbiosis, which was most apparent in VUindividuals but less so in ART(+) subjects, whose gut microbiota was found more resilient. This compositional shift was not observed in the placebo arm. Significantly, declines in indirect markers of bacterial translocation and T-cell activation, improvement of thymic output, and changes in butyrate production were observed. Increases in the abundance of Faecalibacterium and Lachnospira strongly correlated with moderate but significant increases of butyrate production and amelioration of the inflammatory biomarkers soluble CD14 and high-sensitivity C-reactive protein, especially among VU. Hence, the bacterial butyrate synthesis pathway holds promise as a viable target for interventions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available