Gut microbiome-dependent IL-1 signaling is a mediator of ACVR1 R206H -driven heterotopic ossification
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Inflammatory diseases cause significant morbidity and mortality, but their pathobiology is often difficult to dissect due to complex genetic-environmental interactions. Genetic forms of heterotopic ossification, such as fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva (FOP), reduce genetic variability, allowing careful dissection of non-genetic drivers of inflammation. While >95% of FOP patients harbor the ACVR1 R206H mutation, patients exhibit significant variability in disease progression, suggesting a role of environmental drivers. Here, we identify the gut microbiome as a regulator of inflammation-driven HO in FOP. Metagenomic profiling of cohabitating FOP/unaffected sibling pairs revealed a pathogenic gut microbiome profile in FOP patients (Bray-Curtis, p < 0.05). In Pdgfrα-Cre/Acvr1 R206H (FOP) mice, gut microbiome ablation by antibiotics reduced spontaneous HO formation (47.4% reduction, p < 0.05) and reduced plasma IL-1 pathway activity. IL-1β blockade in FOP mice suppressed trauma-induced HO formation. These findings identify a gut microbiome-IL-1-HO axis with modifiable targets for developing treatments for HO and related inflammatory conditions.
One Sentence Summary
Antibiotic disruption of the gut microbiome reduces HO in FOP mice via an IL-1 mediated pathway.