Abstract

Birdshot retinochoroidopathy occurs exclusively in individuals who are HLA-A29 positive. The mechanism to account for this association is unknown. The gut microbiome has been causally implicated in many immune-mediated diseases. We hypothesized that HLA-A29 would affect the composition of the gut microbiome, leading to a dysbiosis and immune-mediated eye disease. Fecal and intestinal biopsy samples were obtained from 107 healthy individuals from Portland, Oregon environs, 10 of whom were HLA-A29 positive, undergoing routine colonoscopy. Bacterial profiling was achieved via 16S rRNA metabarcoding. Publicly available whole meta-genome sequencing data from the Human Microbiome Project (HMP), consisting of 298 healthy controls mostly of US origin, were also interrogated. PERMANOVA and sparse partial least squares discriminant analysis (sPLSDA) demonstrated that subjects who were HLA-A29 positive differed in bacterial species composition (beta diversity) compared to HLA-A29 negative subjects in both the Portland (p = 0.019) and HMP cohorts (p = 0.0002). The Portland and HMP cohorts evidenced different subsets of bacterial species associated with HLA-A29 status, likely due to differences in the metagenomic techniques employed. The functional composition of the HMP cohort did not differ overall (p = 0.14) between HLA-A29 positive and negative subjects, although some distinct pathways such as heparan sulfate biosynthesis showed differences. As we and others have shown for various HLA alleles, the HLA allotype impacts the composition of the microbiome. We hypothesize that HLA-A29 may predispose chorioretinitis via an altered gut microbiome.

Highlights

  • Birdshot retinochoroidopathy occurs exclusively in individuals who are HLA-A29 positive

  • We demonstrated that carriage of the main risk alleles for ankylosing spondylitis and rheumatoid arthritis (HLA-B27 and HLA-DRB1 risk alleles, respectively) correlated with microbiome perturbance in healthy ­individuals[3]

  • HLA molecules are responsible for antigen presentation, the mechanism by which HLA molecules predispose to disease is most often unknown

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Summary

Introduction

Birdshot retinochoroidopathy occurs exclusively in individuals who are HLA-A29 positive. We hypothesized that HLA-A29 would affect the composition of the gut microbiome, leading to a dysbiosis and immune-mediated eye disease. PERMANOVA and sparse partial least squares discriminant analysis (sPLSDA) demonstrated that subjects who were HLA-A29 positive differed in bacterial species composition (beta diversity) compared to HLA-A29 negative subjects in both the Portland (p = 0.019) and HMP cohorts (p = 0.0002). Birdshot retinochoroidopathy (BSRC) is a vision-threatening, immune-mediated inflammation of the posterior uveal ­tract[11] It occurs exclusively in individuals who have the HLA allele, ­A2912–15. We hypothesized that the effect of HLA-A29 on disease susceptibility might be an indirect mechanism through an alteration of the gut microbiome. We tested this hypothesis by characterizing the microbiome in HLA-A29 healthy individuals compared to HLA-A29 negative controls

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