Microbiome diversity and graft-vs.-host disease
In his own presentation, Fredricks described how the population of microbial communities in the gut of blood stem cell transplant patients may change dramatically in response to infection or antibiotic treatments. “The gut microbiota of patients who have undergone transplant at our center can be highly dynamic,” he said.
Fredricks’ team was able to track and characterize these disruptions and showed that when certain bacterial species dominate the microbiome — out-competing their neighbors and creating a less diverse community — the risk of a patient later developing severe graft-vs.-host disease increases significantly. GVHD is the dangerous and often debilitating complication where transplanted immune cells attack the patient’s healthy tissues.
Underscoring the importance of research to control GVHD, Fredricks noted that in the five decades that bone marrow transplantation has been saving lives, “we still don’t understand why some patients develop GVHD, while other patients do not.”
A bacterium linked to colon cancer
Among the other speakers, Dr. Susan Bullman of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard outlined research she is spearheading on a species of bacteria, Fusobacterium nucleatum, which is implicated in colorectal cancer. Her studies show that when colon cancer cells spread to the liver, the dangerous bacteria travel there as well, embedding with those rogue cancer cells as the disease enters its most lethal phase.
Dr. Stephen J.D. O’Keefe, a University of Pittsburgh researcher who also runs the African Microbiome Institute at Stellenbosch University in South Africa, said colon cancer is the second leading cause of cancer death worldwide but is largely preventable. “Diet drives colon cancer risk,’’ he said. “It is not the diet that causes cancer. It’s the effect of diet on the microbiome.”
O’Keefe maintains that Western diets that are high in fat and low in fiber increase the production of bile acids and cause bacterial communities in the colon to generate cancer-causing metabolites as they break down these foods.
Yet in Africa, where more than 50 grams of fiber from corn and other high fiber foods is central to daily diets, colon cancer is comparatively rare. He believes that boosting the fiber content of Western diets would help bring colon cancer rates more in line with those in Africa. USDA recommendations for daily fiber in a diet — 38 grams and 25 grams, respectively, for men and women under 50 — “are half what they should be,” O’Keefe said.