An association between the gut microbiota and immune cell dynamics in humans.

2020 
The gut microbiota influences development and homeostasis of the mammalian immune system(1-3), can alter immune cell compositions in mice(4-7), and is associated with responses to immunotherapy that rely on the activity of peripheral immune cells(8-12). Still, our understanding of how the microbiota modulates immune cells dynamics remains limited, particularly in humans where a lack of deliberate manipulations makes inference challenging. Here we study hundreds of hospitalized---and closely monitored---patients receiving hematopoietic cell transplantation as they recover from chemotherapy and stem cell engraftment. This aggressive treatment causes large shifts in both circulatory immune cell and microbiota populations, allowing the relationships between the two to be studied simultaneously. We analyzed daily changes in white blood cells from 2,235 patients, and 10,680 longitudinal microbiota samples to identify bacteria associated with those changes. Bayesian inference and validation across patient cohorts revealed consistent associations between gut bacteria and white blood cell dynamics in the context of immunomodulatory medications, clinical metadata and homeostatic feedbacks. We contrasted the potency of fermentatively active, obligate anaerobic bacteria with that of medications with known immunomodulatory mechanism to estimate the potential of the microbiota to influence peripheral immune cell dynamics. Our analysis establishes and quantifies the link between the gut microbiota and the human immune system, with implications for microbiota-driven modulation of immunity.
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