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On the robustness of inference of association with the gut microbiota in stool, rectal swab and mucosal tissue samples

Sun, Shan; Zhu, Xiangzhu; Huang, Xiang; Murff, Harvey J; Ness, Reid M; Seidner, Douglas L; Sorgen, Alicia A; Blakley, Ivory C; Yu, Chang; Dai, Qi; Azcarate-Peril, M Andrea; Shrubsole, Martha J; Fodor, Anthony A
The gut microbiota plays an important role in human health and disease. Stool, rectal swab and rectal mucosal tissue samples have been used in individual studies to survey the microbial community but the consequences of using these different sample types are not completely understood. In this study, we report differences in stool, rectal swab and rectal mucosal tissue microbial communities with shotgun metagenome sequencing of 1397 stool, swab and mucosal tissue samples from 240 participants. The taxonomic composition of stool and swab samples was distinct, but less different to each other than mucosal tissue samples. Functional profile differences between stool and swab samples are smaller, but mucosal tissue samples remained distinct from the other two types. When the taxonomic and functional profiles were used for inference in association with host phenotypes of age, sex, body mass index (BMI), antibiotics or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) use, hypothesis testing using either stool or rectal swab gave broadly significantly correlated results, but inference performed on mucosal tissue samples gave results that were generally less consistent with either stool or swab. Our study represents an important resource for determination of how inference can change for taxa and pathways depending on the choice of where to sample within the human gut.
PMCID:8295290
PMID: 34290321
ISSN: 2045-2322
CID: 5162852

Unconjugated bilirubin is associated with protection from early-life wheeze and childhood asthma

Turi, Kedir N; McKennan, Christopher; Gebretsadik, Tebeb; Snyder, Brittney; Seroogy, Christine M; Lemanske, Robert F; Zoratti, Edward; Havstad, Suzanne; Ober, Carole; Lynch, Susan; McCauley, Kathyrn; Yu, Chang; Jackson, Daniel J; Gern, James E; Hartert, Tina V
BACKGROUND:Wheeze and allergic sensitization are the strongest early-life predictors of childhood asthma development; the molecular origins of these early-life phenotypes are poorly understood. OBJECTIVES:We sought to identify metabolites associated with early-life wheeze, allergic sensitization, and childhood asthma. METHODS:We conducted a nested case-control study using Environmental influences on Child Health Outcomes Program cohorts for discovery and independent replication. Wheeze and allergic sensitization were defined by number of wheeze episodes and positive specific IgE at age 1 year, respectively. Asthma was defined as physician diagnosis of asthma at age 5 or 6 years. We used untargeted metabolomics, controlling for observed and latent confounding factors, to assess associations between the plasma metabolome and early-life wheeze, allergy, and childhood asthma. RESULTS:Eighteen plasma metabolites were associated with first-year wheeze in the discovery cohort (n = 338). Z,Z unconjugated bilirubin (UCB) and its related metabolites exhibited a dose-response relationship with wheeze frequency; UCB levels were 13% (β = 0.87; 95% CI, 0.74-1.02) and 22% (β = 0.78; 95% CI, 0.68-0.91) lower in children with 1 to 3 and 4+ wheeze episodes compared with those who never wheezed, respectively. UCB levels were also associated with childhood asthma (β = 0.82; 95% CI, 0.68-0.98). Similar trends were observed in 2 independent cohorts. UCB was significantly negatively correlated with eicosanoid- and oxidative stress-related metabolites. There were no significant associations between metabolites and allergic sensitization. CONCLUSIONS:We identified a novel inverse, dose-dependent association between UCB and recurrent wheeze and childhood asthma. Inflammatory lipid mediators and oxidative stress byproducts inversely correlated with UCB, suggesting that UCB modulates pathways critical to the development of early-life recurrent wheeze and childhood asthma.
PMID: 33434532
ISSN: 1097-6825
CID: 5161982

A weighted log-rank test and associated effect estimator for cancer trials with delayed treatment effect

Yu, Chang; Huang, Xiang; Nian, Hui; He, Philip
The standard log-rank test has been extended by adopting various weight functions. Cancer vaccine or immunotherapy trials have shown a delayed onset of effect for the experimental therapy. This is manifested as a delayed separation of the survival curves. This work proposes new weighted log-rank tests to account for such delay. The weight function is motivated by the time-varying hazard ratio between the experimental and the control therapies. We implement a numerical evaluation of the Schoenfeld approximation (NESA) for the mean of the test statistic. The NESA enables us to assess the power and to calculate the sample size for detecting such delayed treatment effect and also for a more general specification of the non-proportional hazards in a trial. We further show a connection between our proposed test and the weighted Cox regression. Then the average hazard ratio using the same weight is obtained as an estimand of the treatment effect. Extensive simulation studies are conducted to compare the performance of the proposed tests with the standard log-rank test and to assess their robustness to model mis-specifications. Our tests outperform the Gρ,γ class in general and have performance close to the optimal test. We demonstrate our methods on two cancer immunotherapy trials.
PMID: 33427400
ISSN: 1539-1612
CID: 5161902

Treatment of Primary Aldosteronism Increases Plasma Epoxyeicosatrienoic Acids

Luther, James M; Wei, Dawei S; Ghoshal, Kakali; Peng, Dungeng; Adler, Gail K; Turcu, Adina F; Nian, Hui; Yu, Chang; Solorzano, Carmen C; Pozzi, Ambra; Brown, Nancy J
[Figure: see text].
PMCID:8320355
PMID: 33583202
ISSN: 1524-4563
CID: 5161912

Magnesium Treatment on Methylation Changes of Transmembrane Serine Protease 2 (TMPRSS2)

Fan, Lei; Zhu, Xiangzhu; Zheng, Yinan; Zhang, Wei; Seidner, Douglas L; Ness, Reid; Murff, Harvey J; Yu, Chang; Huang, Xiang; Shrubsole, Martha J; Hou, Lifang; Dai, Qi
Background/UNASSIGNED:The viral entry of SARS-CoV-2 requires host-expressed TMPRSS2 to facilitate the viral spike (S) protein priming. Objectives/UNASSIGNED:. Methods/UNASSIGNED:This study is nested within the Personalized Prevention of Colorectal Cancer Trial (PPCCT), a double-blind 2×2 factorial randomized controlled trial, which enrolled 250 participants from Vanderbilt University Medical Center. Target doses for both Mg and placebo arms were personalized. Results/UNASSIGNED:value=0.088). Conclusion/UNASSIGNED:genotype.
PMID: 33758885
ISSN: n/a
CID: 5162822

Association of a glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor gene variant with glucose response to a mixed meal

Mashayekhi, Mona; Wilson, Jessica R; Jafarian-Kerman, Scott; Nian, Hui; Yu, Chang; Shuey, Megan M; Luther, James M; Brown, Nancy J
Dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitors increase endogenous glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1). We hypothesized that genetic variation in the gene encoding the GLP-1 receptor (GLP1R) could affect the metabolic response to DPP-4 inhibition. To evaluate the relationship between the GLP1R rs6923761 variant (G-to-A nucleic acid substitution) and metabolic responses, we performed mixed meal studies in individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus and hypertension after 7-day treatment with placebo and the DPP-4 inhibitor sitagliptin. This analysis is a substudy of NCT02130687. The genotype frequency was 13:12:7 GG:GA:AA among individuals of European ancestry. Postprandial glucose excursion was significantly decreased in individuals carrying the rs6923761 variant (GA or AA) as compared with GG individuals during both placebo (P = 0.001) and sitagliptin treatment (P = 0.045), while intact GLP-1 levels were similar among the genotype groups. In contrast, sitagliptin lowered postprandial glucose to a greater degree in GG as compared with GA/AA individuals (P = 0.035). The relationship between GLP1R rs6923761 genotype and therapies that modulate GLP-1 signalling merits study in large populations.
PMCID:8142152
PMID: 33001556
ISSN: 1463-1326
CID: 5161892

United States Pulmonary Hypertension Scientific Registry: Baseline Characteristics

Badlam, Jessica B; Badesch, David B; Austin, Eric D; Benza, Raymond L; Chung, Wendy K; Farber, Harrison W; Feldkircher, Kathy; Frost, Adaani E; Poms, Abby D; Lutz, Katie A; Pauciulo, Michael W; Yu, Chang; Nichols, William C; Elliott, C Gregory
BACKGROUND:The treatment, genotyping, and phenotyping of patients with World Health Organization Group 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) have evolved dramatically in the last decade. RESEARCH QUESTION:The United States Pulmonary Hypertension Scientific Registry was established as the first US PAH patient registry to investigate genetic information, reproductive histories, and environmental exposure data in a contemporary patient population. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS:Investigators at 15 US centers enrolled consecutively screened adults diagnosed with Group 1 PAH who had enrolled in the National Biological Sample and Data Repository for PAH (PAH Biobank) within 5 years of a cardiac catheterization demonstrating qualifying hemodynamic criteria. Exposure and reproductive histories were collected by using a structured interview and questionnaire. The biobank provided genetic data. RESULTS:, and 79% were women. Mean duration between symptom onset and diagnostic catheterization was 1.9 years. Sixty-six percent of patients were treated with more than one PAH medication at enrollment. Past use of prescription weight loss drugs (16%), recreational drugs (27%), and oral contraceptive pills (77%) was common. Women often reported miscarriage (37%), although PAH was rarely diagnosed within 6 months of pregnancy (1.9%). Results of genetic testing identified pathogenic or suspected pathogenic variants in 13% of patients, reclassifying 18% of IPAH patients and 5% of APAH patients to heritable PAH. INTERPRETATION:Patients with Group 1 PAH remain predominately middle-aged women diagnosed with IPAH or APAH. Delays in diagnosis of PAH persist. Treatment with combinations of PAH-targeted medications is more common than in the past. Women often report pregnancy complications, as well as exposure to anorexigens, oral contraceptives, and/or recreational drugs. Results of genetic tests frequently identify unsuspected heritable PAH.
PMCID:7803940
PMID: 32858008
ISSN: 1931-3543
CID: 5162022

Linking bacterial enterotoxins and alpha defensin 5 expansion in the Crohn's colitis: A new insight into the etiopathogenetic and differentiation triggers driving colonic inflammatory bowel disease

Rana, Tanu; Korolkova, Olga Y; Rachakonda, Girish; Williams, Amanda D; Hawkins, Alexander T; James, Samuel D; Sakwe, Amos M; Hui, Nian; Wang, Li; Yu, Chang; Goodwin, Jeffrey S; Izban, Michael G; Offodile, Regina S; Washington, Mary K; Ballard, Billy R; Smoot, Duane T; Shi, Xuan-Zheng; Forbes, Digna S; Shanker, Anil; M'Koma, Amosy E
Evidence link bacterial enterotoxins to apparent crypt-cell like cells (CCLCs), and Alpha Defensin 5 (DEFA5) expansion in the colonic mucosa of Crohn's colitis disease (CC) patients. These areas of ectopic ileal metaplasia, positive for Paneth cell (PC) markers are consistent with diagnosis of CC. Retrospectively, we: 1. Identified 21 patients with indeterminate colitis (IC) between 2000-2007 and were reevaluation their final clinical diagnosis in 2014 after a followed-up for mean 8.7±3.7 (range, 4-14) years. Their initial biopsies were analyzed by DEFA5 bioassay. 2. Differentiated ulcer-associated cell lineage (UACL) analysis by immunohistochemistry (IHC) of the CC patients, stained for Mucin 6 (MUC6) and DEFA5. 3. Treated human immortalized colonic epithelial cells (NCM460) and colonoids with pure DEFA5 on the secretion of signatures after 24hr. The control colonoids were not treated. 4. Treated colonoids with/without enterotoxins for 14 days and the spent medium were collected and determined by quantitative expression of DEFA5, CCLCs and other biologic signatures. The experiments were repeated twice. Three statistical methods were used: (i) Univariate analysis; (ii) LASSO; and (iii) Elastic net. DEFA5 bioassay discriminated CC and ulcerative colitis (UC) in a cohort of IC patients with accuracy. A fit logistic model with group CC and UC as the outcome and the DEFA5 as independent variable differentiator with a positive predictive value of 96 percent. IHC staining of CC for MUC6 and DEFA5 stained in different locations indicating that DEFA5 is not co-expressed in UACL and is therefore NOT the genesis of CC, rather a secretagogue for specific signature(s) that underlie the distinct crypt pathobiology of CC. Notably, we observed expansion of signatures after DEFA5 treatment on NCM460 and colonoids cells expressed at different times, intervals, and intensity. These factors are key stem cell niche regulators leading to DEFA5 secreting CCLCs differentiation 'the colonic ectopy ileal metaplasia formation' conspicuously of pathogenic importance in CC.
PMCID:7942995
PMID: 33690604
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 5161992

Distributions associated with simultaneous multiple hypothesis testing

Yu, Chang; Zelterman, Daniel
We develop the distribution for the number of hypotheses found to be statistically significant using the rule from Simes (Biometrika 73: 751"“754, 1986) for controlling the family-wise error rate (FWER). We find the distribution of the number of statistically significant p-values under the null hypothesis and show this follows a normal distribution under the alternative. We propose a parametric distribution ΨI(·) to model the marginal distribution of p-values sampled from a mixture of null uniform and non-uniform distributions under different alternative hypotheses. The ΨI distribution is useful when there are many different alternative hypotheses and these are not individually well understood. We fit ΨI to data from three cancer studies and use it to illustrate the distribution of the number of notable hypotheses observed in these examples. We model dependence in sampled p-values using a latent variable. These methods can be combined to illustrate a power analysis in planning a larger study on the basis of a smaller pilot experiment.
SCOPUS:85092791281
ISSN: 2195-5832
CID: 5162912

Mechanistic Phase II Clinical Trial of Metformin in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension

Brittain, Evan L; Niswender, Kevin; Agrawal, Vineet; Chen, Xinping; Fan, Run; Pugh, Meredith E; Rice, Todd W; Robbins, Ivan M; Song, Haocan; Thompson, Christopher; Ye, Fei; Yu, Chang; Zhu, He; West, James; Newman, John H; Hemnes, Anna R
Background Metabolic dysfunction is highly prevalent in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and likely contributes to both pulmonary vascular disease and right ventricular (RV) failure in part because of increased oxidant stress. Currently, there is no cure for PAH and human studies of metabolic interventions, generally well tolerated in other diseases, are limited in PAH. Metformin is a commonly used oral antidiabetic that decreases gluconeogenesis, increases fatty acid oxidation, and reduces oxidant stress and thus may be relevant to PAH. Methods and Results We performed a single-center, open-label 8-week phase II trial of up to 2 g/day of metformin in patients with idiopathic or heritable PAH with the co-primary end points of safety, including development of lactic acidosis and study withdrawal, and plasma oxidant stress markers. Exploratory end points included RV function via echocardiography, plasma metabolomic analysis performed before and after metformin therapy, and RV triglyceride content by magnetic resonance spectroscopy in a subset of 9 patients. We enrolled 20 patients; 19/20 reached the target dose and all completed the study protocol. There was no clinically significant lactic acidosis or change in oxidant stress markers. Metformin did not change 6-minute walk distance but did significantly improve RV fractional area change (23±8% to 26±6%, P=0.02), though other echocardiographic parameters were unchanged. RV triglyceride content decreased in 8/9 patients (3.2±1.8% to 1.6±1.4%, P=0.015). In an exploratory metabolomic analysis, plasma metabolomic correlates of ≥50% reduction in RV lipid included dihydroxybutyrate, acetylputrescine, hydroxystearate, and glucuronate (P<0.05 for all). In the entire cohort, lipid metabolites were among the most changed by metformin. Conclusions Metformin therapy was safe and well tolerated in patients with PAH in this single-arm, open-label phase II study. Exploratory analyses suggest that metformin may be associated with improved RV fractional area change and, in a subset of patients, reduced RV triglyceride content that correlated with altered lipid and glucose metabolism markers. Registration URL: http://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT01884051.
PMCID:7763730
PMID: 33167773
ISSN: 2047-9980
CID: 5161662