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Limitation of amino acid availability by bacterial populations during enhanced colitis in IBD mouse model.

Tanner G Richie, Leah Heeren, Abigail Kamke, Kourtney Monk, Sophia Pogranichniy et al.
Other mSystems 2023 3 citas
PubMed DOI PDF
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Study Design

Tipo de estudio
In Vitro
Población
Mice
Intervención
Limitation of amino acid availability by bacterial populations during enhanced colitis in IBD mouse model. None
Comparador
None
Resultado primario
inflammation markers
Dirección del efecto
Mixed
Riesgo de sesgo
Unclear

Abstract

Inflammatory bowel disease is associated with an increase in Enterobacteriaceae and Enterococcus species; however, the specific mechanisms are unclear. Previous research has reported the associations between microbiota and inflammation, here we investigate potential pathways that specific bacteria populations use to drive gut inflammation. Richie et al. show that these bacterial populations utilize an alternate sulfur metabolism and are tolerant of host-derived immune-response products. These metabolic pathways drive host gut inflammation and fuel over colonization of these pathobionts in the dysbiotic colon. Cultured isolates from dysbiotic mice indicated faster growth supplemented with L-cysteine, showing these microbes can utilize essential host nutrients.

TL;DR

The results show that microbial populations use alternate metabolisms and sequester host nutrients for growth, associated with inflammation in the gut, and show that these bacterial populations utilize an alternate sulfur metabolism and are tolerant of host-derived immune-response products.

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