Frontiers in Immunology (Mar 2023)

Clinical implications of gut microbiota and cytokine responses in coronavirus disease prognosis

  • Hye Seong,
  • Hye Seong,
  • Hye Seong,
  • Jun Hyoung Kim,
  • Young-Hee Han,
  • Ho Seong Seo,
  • Hak Jun Hyun,
  • Hak Jun Hyun,
  • Jin Gu Yoon,
  • Jin Gu Yoon,
  • Eliel Nham,
  • Eliel Nham,
  • Ji Yun Noh,
  • Ji Yun Noh,
  • Ji Yun Noh,
  • Hee Jin Cheong,
  • Hee Jin Cheong,
  • Hee Jin Cheong,
  • Woo Joo Kim,
  • Woo Joo Kim,
  • Woo Joo Kim,
  • Sooyeon Lim,
  • Sooyeon Lim,
  • Joon Young Song,
  • Joon Young Song,
  • Joon Young Song

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2023.1079277
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14

Abstract

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ObjectivesSevere acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infects gut luminal cells through the angiotensin-converting enzyme-2 receptor and disrupts the gut microbiome. We investigated whether the gut microbiome in the early stage of SARS-CoV-2 infection was associated with the prognosis of coronavirus disease (COVID-19).MethodsThirty COVID-19 patients and 16 healthy controls were prospectively enrolled. Blood and stool samples and clinical details were collected on days 0 (enrollment), 7, 14, and 28. Participants were categorized into four groups by their clinical course.ResultsGut microbiota composition varied during the clinical course of COVID-19 and was closely associated with cytokine levels (p=0.003). A high abundance of the genus Dialister (linear discriminant analysis [LDA] effect size: 3.97856, p=0.004), species Peptoniphilus lacrimalis (LDA effect size: 4.00551, p=0.020), and Anaerococcus prevotii (LDA effect size: 4.00885, p=0.007) was associated with a good prognosis. Starch, sucrose, and galactose metabolism was highly activated in the gut microbiota of the poor prognosis group. Glucose-lowering diets, including whole grains, were positively correlated with a good prognosis.ConclusionGut microbiota may mediate the prognosis of COVID-19 by regulating cytokine responses and controlling glucose metabolism, which is implicated in the host immune response to SARS-CoV-2.

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