GUT bacteria plays a key role in triggering several chronic inflammatory rheumatic diseases affecting the spine and joints, a University of Queensland study has found.
Lead researchers Dr Anne-Sophie Bergot and MD-PhD candidate Ben Cai from UQ’s Frazer Institute found gut inflammation can cause immune-related diseases like Ankylosing Spondylitis and Psoriatic Arthritis.
“We found mice genetically predisposed to spine and joint arthritis developed the disease when colonised with a single gut bacteria,” Dr Bergot said.
“An inflammatory trigger induced leaky gut, which enabled the gut bacteria to move from inside the bowel into the gut wall where immune cells, called macrophages, transported bacterial DNA to joint tissues.
“In the healthy group, the macrophages were anti-inflammatory and bacterial DNA was not detectable in the joints, but in the genetically susceptible mice the macrophages were inflammatory and contained bacterial DNA.
“Extracting inflammatory macrophages and injecting them into healthy at-risk mice gave the mice severe arthritis.
The team then looked at gut and joint tissues from patients with Inflammatory Bowel Disease and Psoriatic Arthritis and found similar bacterial DNA deposits in the gut wall and joint tissues.
The findings also provide a strong argument for preventive strategies such as dietary and lifestyle interventions for people at-risk, the researchers found.
“Exercise, Mediterranean diet and omega-3 are great ways to promote anti-inflammatory responses,” Study co-lead Professor Ranjeny Thomas AM said.
“We are currently running a clinical trial of lifestyle interventions which is open for patients diagnosed with Rheumatoid Arthritis within the last year.”
