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Diet prevents the expansion of segmented filamentous bacteria and ileo-colonic inflammation in a model of Crohn's disease.

Authors :
Metwaly, Amira
Jovic, Jelena
Waldschmitt, Nadine
Khaloian, Sevana
Heimes, Helena
Häcker, Deborah
Ahmed, Mohamed
Hammoudi, Nassim
Le Bourhis, Lionel
Mayorgas, Aida
Siebert, Kolja
Basic, Marijana
Schwerd, Tobias
Allez, Matthieu
Panes, Julian
Salas, Azucena
Bleich, André
Zeissig, Sebastian
Schnupf, Pamela
Cominelli, Fabio
Source :
Microbiome; 3/31/2023, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p1-21, 21p
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Crohn's disease (CD) is associated with changes in the microbiota, and murine models of CD-like ileo-colonic inflammation depend on the presence of microbial triggers. Increased abundance of unknown Clostridiales and the microscopic detection of filamentous structures close to the epithelium of Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> mice, a mouse model of CD-like ileitis pointed towards segmented filamentous bacteria (SFB), a commensal mucosal adherent bacterium involved in ileal inflammation. Results: We show that the abundance of SFB strongly correlates with the severity of CD-like ileal inflammation in two mouse models of ileal inflammation, including Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> and SAMP/Yit mice. SFB mono-colonization of germ-free Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> mice confirmed the causal link and resulted in severe ileo-colonic inflammation, characterized by elevated tissue levels of Tnf and Il-17A, neutrophil infiltration and loss of Paneth and goblet cell function. Co-colonization of SFB in human-microbiota associated Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> mice confirmed that SFB presence is indispensable for disease development. Screening of 468 ileal and colonic mucosal biopsies from adult and pediatric IBD patients, using previously published and newly designed human SFB-specific primer sets, showed no presence of SFB in human tissue samples, suggesting a species-specific functionality of the pathobiont. Simulating the human relevant therapeutic effect of exclusive enteral nutrition (EEN), EEN-like purified diet antagonized SFB colonization and prevented disease development in Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> mice, providing functional evidence for the protective mechanism of diet in modulating microbiota-dependent inflammation in IBD. Conclusions: We identified a novel pathogenic role of SFB in driving severe CD-like ileo-colonic inflammation characterized by loss of Paneth and goblet cell functions in Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> mice. A purified diet antagonized SFB colonization and prevented disease development in Tnf<superscript>ΔARE</superscript> mice in contrast to a fiber-containing chow diet, clearly demonstrating the important role of diet in modulating a novel IBD-relevant pathobiont and supporting a direct link between diet and microbial communities in mediating protective functions. 8ntX7JCRAmgBnFgN24WWkM Video Abstract [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20492618
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Microbiome
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
162852643
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40168-023-01508-y