Associations Between Gut Microbial Features and Sickness Symptoms in Kidney Transplant Recipients

Author:

Sung Choa1ORCID,Park Chang Gi2,Maienschein-Cline Mark3,Chlipala George4ORCID,Green Stefan5,Doorenbos Ardith1,Fink Anne6,Bronas Ulf1,Lockwood Mark1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biobehavioral Nursing Science, College of Nursing, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

2. Department of Population Health Nursing Science, College of Nursing, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

3. Director of Research Informatics Core, University of Illinois Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

4. Associate Director of Research Informatics Core, University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA

5. Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Infectious Disease, Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL, USA

6. Biobehavioral Science in Nursing and Rehabilitation & Regenerative Medicine, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA

Abstract

Purpose The study investigated the relationship of gut microbiome features and sickness symptoms in kidney transplant recipients. Methods Employing a prospective, longitudinal design, we collected data from 19 participants who had undergone living-donor kidney transplant at three timepoints (pre-transplant and 1 week and 3 months post-transplant). Sickness symptom data and fecal specimens were collected at each timepoint. Participants were grouped either as high or low sickness symptom severity at baseline. Shotgun metagenomics sequencing characterized gut microbial structure and functional gene content. Fecal microbial features, including alpha (evenness and richness within samples) and beta (dissimilarities between samples) diversity and relative abundances, were analyzed using R statistical packages. Cross-sectional and longitudinal analyses examined relationships between gut microbial features and sickness symptoms. Results Although our exploratory findings revealed no significant differences in alpha and beta diversity between groups, the high-severity group showed lower microbial richness and evenness than the low-severity group. The high-severity group had enriched relative abundance of bacteria from the genera Citrobacter and Enterobacter and reduced relative abundance of bacteria from the genus Akkermansia across timepoints. No functional genes differed significantly between groups or timepoints. Conclusions Kidney transplant recipients with high symptom burden displayed increased putative proinflammatory bacteria and decreased beneficial bacteria. This study provides an effect size that future large cohort studies can employ to confirm associations between gut microbial features and sickness symptom experiences in the kidney transplant population. The study findings also have implications for future interventional studies aiming to alleviate the sickness symptom burden in this population.

Funder

National Institute of Nursing Research

National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Research and Theory

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