Epithelial hypoxia maintains colonization resistance against Candida albicans.

上皮缺氧维持对白色念珠菌的定植抵抗力

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作者:Savage Hannah P, Bays Derek J, Tiffany Connor R, Gonzalez Mariela A F, Bejarano Eli J, Carvalho Thaynara P, Luo Zheng, Masson Hugo L P, Nguyen Henry, Santos Renato L, Reagan Krystle L, Thompson George R, Bäumler Andreas J
Antibiotic treatment promotes the outgrowth of intestinal Candida albicans, but the mechanisms driving this fungal bloom remain incompletely understood. We identify oxygen as a resource required for post-antibiotic C. albicans expansion. C. albicans depleted simple sugars in the ceca of gnotobiotic mice but required oxygen to grow on these resources in vitro, pointing to anaerobiosis as a potential factor limiting growth in the gut. Clostridia species limit oxygen availability in the large intestine by producing butyrate, which activates peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPAR-γ) signaling to maintain epithelial hypoxia. Streptomycin treatment depleted Clostridia-derived butyrate to increase epithelial oxygenation, but the PPAR-γ agonist 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) functionally replaced Clostridia species to restore epithelial hypoxia and colonization resistance against C. albicans. Additionally, probiotic Escherichia coli required oxygen respiration to prevent a post-antibiotic bloom of C. albicans, further supporting the role of oxygen in colonization resistance. We conclude that limited access to oxygen maintains colonization resistance against C. albicans.

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