4.2 Article

Continued Alcohol Misuse in Human Cirrhosis is Associated with an Impaired Gut-Liver Axis

Journal

ALCOHOLISM-CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RESEARCH
Volume 41, Issue 11, Pages 1857-1865

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acer.13498

Keywords

Bile Acids; Microbiota; Metabolomics; Inflammation; Functionality

Funding

  1. Veterans Affairs Merit Review [I0CX001076]

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Background: Cirrhosis and alcohol can independently affect the gut-liver axis with systemic inflammation. However, their concurrent impact in humans is unclear. Methods: Our aim was to determine the effect of continued alcohol misuse on the gut-liver axis in cirrhotic patients. Age-and MELD-balanced cirrhotic patients who were currently drinking (Alc) or abstinent (NAlc) and healthy controls underwent serum and stool collection. A subset underwent upper endoscopy and colonoscopy for biopsies and duodenal fluid collection. The groups were compared regarding (i) inflammation/intestinal barrier: systemic tumor necrosis factor levels, intestinal inflammatory cytokine (duodenum, ileum, sigmoid), and ileal antimicrobial peptide expression; (ii) microbiota composition: 16SrRNA sequencing of duodenal, ileal, and colonic mucosal and fecal microbiota; and (iii) microbial functionality: duodenal fluid and fecal bile acid (BA) profile (conjugation and dehydroxylation status), intestinal BA transporter (ASBT, FXR, FGF-19, SHP) expression, and stool metabolomics using gas chromatography/mass spectrometry. Results: Alc patients demonstrated a significant duodenal, ileal, and colonic mucosal and fecal dysbiosis, compared to NAlc and controls with lower autochthonous bacterial taxa. BA profile skewed toward a potentially toxic profile (higher secondary and glycine-conjugated BAs) in duodenal fluid and stool in Alc patients. Duodenal fluid demonstrated conjugated secondary BAs only in the Alc group. There was a greater expression of all ileal BA transporters in Alc patients. This group also showed higher endotoxemia, systemic and ileal inflammatory expression, and lower amino acid and bioenergetic-associated metabolites, without change in antimicrobial peptide expression. Conclusions: Despite cirrhosis, continued alcohol misuse predisposes patients to widespread dysbiosis with alterations in microbial functionality such as a toxic BA profile, which can lead to intestinal and systemic inflammation.

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