BMJ Open Gastroenterology (Aug 2024)

Associations of gut microbiota features and circulating metabolites with systemic inflammation in children

  • Marie-France Hivert,
  • Luigi Bouchard,
  • Noel T Mueller,
  • Myriam Doyon,
  • Patrice Perron,
  • Curtis Tilves,
  • Bruno Bohn,
  • Yingan Chen,
  • Renée Guérin,
  • Éric Massé

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjgast-2024-001470
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1

Abstract

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Objective Gut microbes and microbe-dependent metabolites (eg, tryptophan-kynurenine-serotonin pathway metabolites) have been linked to systemic inflammation, but the microbiota-metabolite-inflammation axis remains uncharacterised in children. Here we investigated whether gut microbiota features and circulating metabolites (both microbe-dependent and non-microbe-dependent metabolites) associated with circulating inflammation markers in children.Methods We studied children from the prospective Gen3G birth cohort who had data on untargeted plasma metabolome (n=321 children; Metabolon platform), gut microbiota (n=147; 16S rRNA sequencing), and inflammation markers (plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, and tumour necrosis factor-α) measured at 5–7 years. We examined associations of microbial taxa and metabolites—examining microbe-dependent and non-microbe-dependent metabolites separately—with each inflammatory marker and with an overall inflammation score (InfSc), adjusting for key confounders and correcting for multiple comparisons. We also compared the proportion of significantly associated microbe-dependent versus non-microbe-dependent metabolites, identified a priori (Human Microbial Metabolome Database), with each inflammation marker.Results Of 335 taxa tested, 149 were associated (qFDR<0.05) with at least one inflammatory marker; 10 of these were robust to pseudocount choice. Several bacterial taxa involved in tryptophan metabolism were associated with inflammation, including kynurenine-degrading Ruminococcus, which was inversely associated with all inflammation markers. Of 1037 metabolites tested, 315 were previously identified as microbe dependent and were more frequently associated with PAI-1 and the InfSc than non-microbe dependent metabolites. In total, 87 metabolites were associated (qFDR<0.05) with at least one inflammation marker, including kynurenine (positively), serotonin (positively), and tryptophan (inversely).Conclusion A distinct set of gut microbes and microbe-dependent metabolites, including those involved in the tryptophan-kynurenine-serotonin pathway, may be implicated in inflammatory pathways in childhood.