Abstract

Secretory IgA (SIgA) is released into mucosal surfaces where its function extends beyond that of host defense to include the shaping of resident microbial communities by mediating exclusion/inclusion of respective microbes and regulating bacterial gene expression. In this capacity, SIgA acts as the fulcrum on which host immunity and the health of the microbiota are balanced. We recently completed an analysis of the gut and salivary IgA-Biomes (16S rDNA sequencing of SIgA-coated/uncoated bacteria) in Mexican-American adults that identified IgA-Biome differences across the glycemic spectrum. As Th17:Treg ratio imbalances are associated with gut microbiome dysbiosis and chronic inflammatory conditions such as type 2 diabetes, the present study extends our prior work by examining the impact of Th17:Treg ratios (pro-inflammatory:anti-inflammatory T-cell ratios) and the SIgA response (Th17:Treg-SIgA axis) in shaping microbial communities. Examining the impact of Th17:Treg ratios (determined by epigenetic qPCR lymphocyte subset quantification) on the IgA-Biome across diabetes phenotypes identified a proportional relationship between Th17:Treg ratios and alpha diversity in the stool IgA-Biome of those with dysglycemia, significant changes in community composition of the stool and salivary microbiomes across glycemic profiles, and genera preferentially abundant by T-cell inflammatory phenotype. This is the first study to associate epigenetically quantified Th17:Treg ratios with both the larger and SIgA-fractionated microbiome, assess these associations in the context of a chronic inflammatory disease, and offers a novel frame through which to evaluate mucosal microbiomes in the context of host responses and inflammation.

Highlights

  • ObjectivesIn the present study we aimed to identify associations across the Th17:Treg-Secretory immunoglobulin A (SIgA) axis and glycemic profiles by studying a population whose stool and salivary IgA-Biomes had been previously characterized [13]

  • Relative Th17 and Treg cell counts were defined for individuals with previously established stool and salivary IgA-Biomes using quantitative epigenetic real-time PCR and the Th17:Treg ratios calculated (Fig 2) [13]

  • Comparisons of Th17:Treg ratio between individuals with normoglycemia (n = 8), prediabetes (n = 8), or diabetes (n = 8) identified elevated Th17: Treg ratios in dysglycemic individuals, those classified as having prediabetes (mean ± standard deviation (SD): 2.22±0.20; range: 1.514–3.239) and diabetes, compared to individuals with normal blood sugar values

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Summary

Objectives

In the present study we aimed to identify associations across the Th17:Treg-SIgA axis and glycemic profiles by studying a population whose stool and salivary IgA-Biomes had been previously characterized [13]

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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