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Causal relationships between gut microbiota, plasma metabolites, and HIV infection: insights from Mendelian randomization and mediation analysis.
Gut dysbiosis and metabolic abnormalities have been implicated in HIV infection. However, the exact causal relationships among the gut microbiota, metabolites, and HIV infection remain poorly understood. Our study involving Mendelian randomization (MR) and mediation analysis aims to unveil these causalities.
Genetic instrumental variables for the gut microbiota were retrieved from MiBioGen consortium (n = 18,340). Metabolism-related genetic variants were sourced from the CLSA cohort (n = 8299). GWAS summary statistics for symptomatic HIV infection were derived from the FinnGen study (n = 309,154), and the UK Biobank (n = 208,808). We performed the bidirectional two-sample MR to assess causalities with the inverse-variance weighted (IVW) method as the primary analysis. Moreover, we executed a mediation analysis using two-step MR methods.
Compared to the causal effects of HIV infection on gut microbiota (or metabolites), those of gut microbiota (or plasma metabolites) on the risk of HIV infection were more substantial. Phylum Proteobacteria (OR: 2.114, 95% CI 1.042-4.288, P = 0.038), and genus Ruminococcaceae UCG013 (OR: 2.127, 95% CI 1.080-4.191, P = 0.029) exhibited an adverse causal effect on HIV infection, whereas genus Clostridium sensu stricto 1(OR: 0.491, 95% CI 0.252-0.956, P = 0.036) and family Erysipelotrichaceae (OR: 0.399, 95% CI 0.193-0.827, P = 0.013) acted as significant protective factors for HIV. The salicyluric glucuronide level (OR = 2.233, 95% CI 1.120-4.453, P = 0.023) exhibited a considerably adverse causal effect on HIV infection. Conversely, the salicylate-to-citrate ratio (OR: 0.417, 95% CI 0.253-0.688, P = 0.001) was identified as a protective factor for HIV. We identified only one bidirectional causality between 1-palmitoyl-GPI and HIV infection. Mechanistically, genus Haemophilus mediated the causal effects of three phospholipids on HIV infection risk: 1-palmitoyl-GPI (mediation proportion = 33.7%, P = 0.018), 1-palmitoyl-2-arachidonoyl-GPI (mediation proportion = 18.3%, P = 0.019), and 1-linoleoyl-2-linolenoyl-GPC (mediation proportion = 20.3%, P = 0.0216). Additionally, 5-Dodecenoylcarnitine (C12:1) mediated the causal effect of genus Sellimonas on the risk of HIV infection (mediation proportion = 13.7%, P = 0.0348).
Our study revealed that gut microbiota and metabolites causally influence HIV infection risk more substantially than the reverse. We identified the bidirectional causality between 1-palmitoyl-GPI (16:0) and HIV infection, and elucidated four mediation relationships. These findings provide genetic insights into prediction, prevention, and personalized medicine of HIV infection.
Hu J
,Hu J
,Han D
《Virology Journal》
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Causal effects of gut microbiome on HIV infection: a two-sample mendelian randomization analysis.
The causal association between gut microbiome and HIV infection remains to be elucidated. We conducted a two-sample mendelian randomization analysis to estimate the causality between gut microbiome and HIV infection.
Publicly released genome-wide association studies summary data were collected to perform the mendelian analysis. The GWAS summary data of gut microbiome was retrieved from the MiBioGen consortium, which contains 18 340 samples from 24 cohorts. GWAS summary data of HIV infection was collected from the R5 release of FinnGen consortium, including 357 HIV infected cases and 218 435 controls. The SNPs were selected as instrumental variables according to our selection rules. And SNPs with a F-statistics less than ten were regarded as weak instrumental variables and excluded. Mendelian randomization analysis was conducted by five methods, including inverse variance weighted (IVW), MR-Egger, weighted median, weighted mode, and simple mode. The Cochran's Q test and MR-Egger intercept test were performed to identify heterogeneity and pleiotropy. Leave-one-out analysis were used to test the sensitivity of the results.
Fifteen gut microbiota taxa showed causal effects on HIV infection according to the MR methods. Four taxa were observed to increase the risk of HIV infection, including Ruminococcaceae (OR: 2.468[1.043, 5.842], P: 0.039), Ruminococcaceae UCG005 (OR: 2.051[1.048, 4.011], P: 0.036), Subdoligranulum (OR: 3.957[1.762, 8.887], P < 0.001) and Victivallis (OR: 1.605[1.012, 2.547], P=0.044). Erysipelotrichaceae was protective factor of HIV infection (OR: 0.278[0.106, 0.731], P < 0.001) and Methanobrevibacter was also found to be associated with reduced risk of HIV infection (OR: 0.509[0.265, 0.980], P=0.043). Horizontal pleiotropy was found for Fusicatenibacter (P<0.05) according to the MR-Egger regression intercept analysis. No heterogeneity was detected.
Our results demonstrate significant causal effects of gut microbiome on HIV infection. These findings facilitate future studies to develop better strategies for HIV prophylaxis through gut microbiome regulation. Further explorations are also warranted to dissect the mechanism of how gut microbiome affects HIV susceptibility.
Li K
,Zhang C
,Deng J
,Zeng H
,Zhang Y
,Lai G
,Zhong X
,Xie B
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《BMC INFECTIOUS DISEASES》
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Causal relationship between gut microbiota and tuberculosis: a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization analysis.
Yuan Z
,Kang Y
,Mo C
,Huang S
,Qin F
,Zhang J
,Wang F
,Jiang J
,Yang X
,Liang H
,Ye L
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《RESPIRATORY RESEARCH》
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Causal relationship of genetically predicted gut microbiota with thyroid cancer: a bidirectional two-sample mendelian randomization study.
Previous investigations have demonstrated a correlation between the composition of gut microbiota and the development of thyroid cancer (TC). Nonetheless, there was no consensus on the causal effect of gut microbiota composition on TC risk. Therefore, the present study aimed to perform a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to explore potential causal associations between gut microbiota and TC risk.
Utilizing data from the MiBioGen consortium's genome-wide association studies (GWAS) meta-analysis involving a sample size of 18,340, we identified instrumental variables for 211 gut microbiota taxa. The summary statistics for TC was from relevant large-scale GWAS conducted by the FinnGen consortium. In the first stage, the Inverse-variance weighted (IVW) method was used as the primary estimate method, and the stability of estimations was tested by a battery of sensitivity analyses. In the second stage, a reverse MR analysis was applied to determine whether reverse causality existed.
According to the IVW method, we identified 9 genetically predicted gut microbiota that were causally correlated with TC risk. Among them, we observed a positive causal effect of Family Christensenellaceae (OR = 1.664, 95% CI: 1.103-2.511, P = 0.015), Family Victivallaceae (OR = 1.268, 95% CI: 1.009-1.594, P = 0.042), Genus Methanobrevibacter (OR = 1.505, 95% CI: 1.049-2.159, P = 0.027), Genus Ruminococcus2 (OR = 1.846, 95% CI: 1.261-2.704, P = 0.002), Genus Subdoligranulum (OR = 1.907, 95% CI: 1.165-3.121, P = 0.010), Phylum Verrucomicrobia (OR = 1.309, 95% CI: 1.027-1.668, P = 0.029) on TC risk, while Class Betaproteobacteria (OR = 0.522, 95% CI: 0.310-0.879, P = 0.015), Family Family XI (OR = 0.753, 95% CI: 0.577-0.983, P = 0.037), Genus Sutterella (OR = 0.596, 95% CI: 0.381-0.933, P = 0.024) might be correlated with a decreased risk of TC. Subsequently, various sensitivity analyses indicated no heterogeneity, directional pleiotropy or outliers. In addition, reverse analysis demonstrated a negative causal effect of TC risk on the abundance of the gut microbiota (Genus Ruminococcus2, OR = 0.947, 95% CI: 0.907-0.989, P = 0.014).
Genetic evidence suggested that bidirectional causal associations of specific bacteria taxa and the risk of TC, highlighting the association of the "gut-thyroid" axis. Further exploration of the potential microbiota-related mechanisms might have profound implications for public health in terms of the early prevention and treatment of TC.
Sun X
,Chen S
,Zhao S
,Wang J
,Cheng H
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《Frontiers in Endocrinology》
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Effect of the gut microbiome, plasma metabolome, peripheral cells, and inflammatory cytokines on obesity: a bidirectional two-sample Mendelian randomization study and mediation analysis.
Obesity is a metabolic and chronic inflammatory disease involving genetic and environmental factors. This study aimed to investigate the causal relationship among gut microbiota abundance, plasma metabolomics, peripheral cell (blood and immune cell) counts, inflammatory cytokines, and obesity.
Summary statistics of 191 gut microbiota traits (N = 18,340), 1,400 plasma metabolite traits (N = 8,299), 128 peripheral cell counts (blood cells, N = 408,112; immune cells, N = 3,757), 41 inflammatory cytokine traits (N = 8,293), and 6 obesity traits were obtained from publicly available genome-wide association studies. Two-sample Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis was applied to infer the causal links using inverse variance-weighted, maximum likelihood, MR-Egger, weighted median, weighted mode, and Wald ratio methods. Several sensitivity analyses were also utilized to ensure reliable MR results. Finally, we used mediation analysis to identify the pathway from gut microbiota to obesity mediated by plasma metabolites, peripheral cells, and inflammatory cytokines.
MR revealed a causal effect of 44 gut microbiota taxa, 281 plasma metabolites, 27 peripheral cells, and 8 inflammatory cytokines on obesity. Among them, five shared causal gut microbiota taxa belonged to the phylum Actinobacteria, order Bifidobacteriales, family Bifidobacteriaceae, genus Lachnospiraceae UCG008, and species Eubacterium nodatum group. Furthermore, we screened 42 shared causal metabolites, 7 shared causal peripheral cells, and 1 shared causal inflammatory cytokine. Based on known causal metabolites, we observed that the metabolic pathways of D-arginine, D-ornithine, linoleic acid, and glycerophospholipid metabolism were closely related to obesity. Finally, mediation analysis revealed 20 mediation relationships, including the causal pathway from gut microbiota to obesity, mediated by 17 metabolites, 2 peripheral cells, and 1 inflammatory cytokine. Sensitivity analysis represented no heterogeneity or pleiotropy in this study.
Our findings support a causal relationship among gut microbiota, plasma metabolites, peripheral cells, inflammatory cytokines, and obesity. These biomarkers provide new insights into the mechanisms underlying obesity and contribute to its prevention, diagnosis, and treatment.
Li Y
,Wang X
,Zhang Z
,Shi L
,Cheng L
,Zhang X
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《Frontiers in Immunology》