Vicky Yao, a computational biologist at Rice University, discovered the link when she found traces of bacteria associated with periodontal disease in samples collected from rheumatoid arthritis patients. The study has been published in Science Translational Medicine.
Tracing this connection between the two conditions could help develop therapies for rheumatoid arthritis, an autoimmune inflammatory disease that attacks the lining of the joints and can cause heart, lung and eye problems. The approach that led to the study could prove fruitful in other disease contexts, such as cancer.
Vicky said, “Data gathered in experiments from living organisms or cells or tissue grown in Petri dishes is really important to confirm hypotheses, but, at the same time, this data perhaps holds more information than we are immediately able to derive from it.”
Vicky’s hunch was confirmed when she took a deeper look into data collected from rheumatoid arthritis patients by Dana Orange, an associate professor of clinical investigation and a rheumatologist, and Bob Darnell, a professor and attending physician at Rockefeller University and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute.
Vicky commented, “Dana, working with Bob, collected data from arthritis patients at regular intervals while, at the same time, monitoring when the flares happened. The idea was that perhaps looking at this data retroactively, some pattern would become visible giving clues as to what might cause the arthritis to flare up.
“While I was working on that project, I went to this talk that I thought was really cool because it pointed out that in the data that gets ignored or thrown out, you can actually find traces of microbes. You’re looking at a human sample, but you get a snapshot of the microbes floating around. I was intrigued by this.”
Proposed model for the role of periodontal inflammation in rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Periodontal inflammation is associated with a chemical change in supragingival bacteria caused by an enzyme released as part of an immune response mechanism known as NETosis. This chemical change "decorates" bacterial antigens with a molecular tag. Periodontitis and inflammation can cause breaches of the mucous membrane lining inside the mouth, releasing the tagged bacterial antigens into the blood. As a result, antibodies that target these molecular tags are activated, and they bind or trap the tagged antigens, forming molecules known as immune complexes. Immune complexes and plasmablasts deposit in joint tissue, also known as synovium, and contribute to inflammation. Repeated episodes of oral bacteremia cause a heightened autoimmune response, affecting joint tissue.
When she looked into it, Yao found that the germs in the samples that changed consistently across patients prior to flares were largely ones associated with gum disease.
Vicky explains, “I was curious about this tool that allowed you to detect microbes in human samples. It was sort of like, for free, you’re getting an extra perspective on the data. At the time, I hadn’t worked much on microbial data at all. Since then, Dana leveraged all this expertise and got together with people studying these bacteria.
“One of the things that came up when we were discussing this was, how cool would it be if you could prescribe some kind of mouthwash to help prevent rheumatoid arthritis flares.”
Vicky’s focus since joining Rice University in 2019 has shifted to cancer research. The discovery of meaningful information in data that would usually be ignored or discarded inspired Vicky to take a similar approach in looking at data from cancer patients.
“I got really interested in what else we can find mining for microbial signatures in human samples,” Yao said. “Now, we’re doing something similar in looking at cancer.
“The hope here is that if we find some interesting microbial or viral signatures that are associated with cancer, we can then identify productive experimental directions to pursue. For instance, if having a tumour creates this hotbed of specific microbes that we recognise, then we can maybe use that knowledge as a means to diagnose the cancer sooner or in a less invasive or costly way. Or, if you have microbes that have a very strong association with survival rates, that can help with prognosis. And if experiments confirm a causal link between a specific virus or bacteria and a type of cancer, then, of course, that could be useful for therapeutics.”
One of the better-known examples of a pathogen associated with cancer is the human papillomavirus (HPV). Vicky used this well-documented connection to verify her approach.
“When we did the same exercise looking at cervical cancer tumour samples, we consistently detected the virus,” she said. “It’s a nice proof-of-principle finding that shows that the presence of specific pathogens can be meaningful for certain types of cancer.
“I’m really interested in using computational approaches to bridge the gap between available experimental data and ways to interpret it. Computational analysis is a way to help interpret data and prioritise hypotheses for clinicians or experimental scientists to test.”