Scientists Discover a Unique Gut Bacteria That May Cause Arthritis

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Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune and inflammatory disease that causes joint inflammation and pain.

A bacterium has been identified by the CU Division of Rheumatology that may trigger rheumatoid arthritis in those who are already at risk.

Researchers at the University of Colorado School of Medicine have found that a unique bacteria found in the gut may be responsible for causing rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in patients who are already predisposed to the autoimmune disease.

A group of researchers from the Division of Rheumatology worked on the study under the leadership of Kristine Kuhn, MD, Ph.D., an associate professor of rheumatology. The study was recently published in the journal Science Translational Medicine. Meagan Chriswell, a medical student at CU, is the paper’s lead author.

“Work led by co-authors Drs. Kevin Deane, Kristen Demoruelle, and Mike Holers here at CU helped establish that we can identify people who are at risk for RA based on serologic markers, and that these markers can be present in the blood for many years before diagnosis,” Kuhn says. “When they looked at those antibodies, one is the normal class of antibody we normally see in circulation, but the other is an antibody that we usually associate with our mucosa, whether it be the oral mucosa, the gut mucosa, or the lung mucosa. We started to wonder, ‘Could there be something at a mucosal barrier site that could be driving RA?’”

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Discovering a new bacterium

The CU researchers, with assistance from a team at Stanford University headed by Bill Robinson, MD, Ph.D., collected immune cells from people whose blood markers indicated they were at risk for the disease and mixed them with the at-risk people’s feces to discover the bacteria that were tagged by the antibodies.

The researchers employed animal models to host the newly found bacteria in order to explore their theory further. These tests revealed that the bacteria not only caused the animal models to develop the blood markers observed in people who are at risk for RA but that some of the models also developed full-blown RA.

“Our collaborators led by Drs. Eddie James and Jane Buckner of Benaroya Research Institute confirmed that the T cells in the blood of people with RA will respond to these bacteria, but people who are otherwise healthy do not respond to these bacteria,” Kuhn says. “Through studies in human and animal models, we were able to identify these bacteria as being associated with the risk for developing RA. They trigger an RA-like disease in the animal models, and in humans, we can show that this bacterium seems to be triggering immune responses specific to RA.”

A new target for RA

If the unique species of bacteria is indeed driving the immune response that leads to RA in individuals already at risk for the disease, Kuhn says, it might be possible to target the bacteria with medication to prevent that response from happening.

“The next thing we want to do is identify, in larger populations of individuals at risk for RA, if these bacteria correlate with other genetic, environmental, and mucosal immune responses, and then ultimately, the development of RA,” Kuhn says. “Then we could say, ‘This is a marker that’s useful in helping predict who will go on to develop RA,’ and apply prevention strategies. The other opportunity there is that if we can understand how it is triggering these immune responses, we might be able to block the bacteria’s ability to do that. “

Studying the trigger mechanism

The research took five years to conduct and analyze, Kuhn says, helped along by individuals who discovered they were at risk for RA and volunteered to support the research effort. Eventually, the researchers want to examine exactly how the bacteria triggers the immune response, as well as different methods of preventing the reaction from happening.

“There are a lot of different technologies that are just starting to come out that could selectively target a bacterium in the gut microbiome, for example, to prevent it from having immunogenic effects on the host,” she says. “For a long time, people have thought that antibiotics could be a useful therapy for RA, but rather than the sledgehammer effect of a traditional antibiotic that’s going to wipe out a large group of bacteria, we might be able to selectively target this bacterium or its effects.”

Reference: “Clonal IgA and IgG autoantibodies from individuals at risk for rheumatoid arthritis identify an arthritogenic strain of Subdoligranulum” by Meagan E. Chriswell, Adam R. Lefferts, Michael R. Clay, Alex Ren Hsu, Jennifer Seifert, Marie L. Feser, Cliff Rims, Michelle S. Bloom, Elizabeth A. Bemis, Sucai Liu, Megan D. Maerz, Daniel N. Frank, M. Kristen Demoruelle, Kevin D. Deane, Eddie A. James, Jane H. Buckner, William H. Robinson, V. Michael Holers and Kristine A. Kuhn, 26 October 2022, Science Translational Medicine.
DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abn5166

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