Gastrointestinal microbiota contributes to the development of murine transfusion-related acute lung injury

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Abstract

Transfusion-related acute lung injury (TRALI) is a syndrome of respiratory distress upon blood transfusion and is the leading cause of transfusion-related fatalities. Whether the gut microbiota plays any role in the development of TRALI is currently unknown. We observed that untreated barrier-free (BF) mice suffered from severe antibody-mediated acute lung injury, whereas the more sterile housed specific pathogen-free (SPF) mice and gut flora-depleted BF mice were both protected from lung injury. The prevention of TRALI in the SPF mice and gut flora–depleted BF mice was associated with decreased plasma macrophage inflammatory protein-2 levels as well as decreased pulmonary neutrophil accumulation. DNA sequencing of amplicons of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene revealed a varying gastrointestinal bacterial composition between BF and SPF mice. BF fecal matter transferred into SPF mice significantly restored TRALI susceptibility in SPF mice. These data reveal a link between the gut flora composition and the development of antibody-mediated TRALI in mice. Assessment of gut microbial composition may help in TRALI risk assessment before transfusion.

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Kapur, R., Kim, M., Rebetz, J., Hallström, B., Björkman, J. T., Takabe-French, A., … Semple, J. W. (2018). Gastrointestinal microbiota contributes to the development of murine transfusion-related acute lung injury. Blood Advances, 2(13), 1651–1663. https://doi.org/10.1182/bloodadvances.2018018903

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