Microbiotas from Humans with Inflammatory Bowel Disease Alter the Balance of Gut Th17 and RORγt+ Regulatory T Cells and Exacerbate Colitis in Mice

来自患有炎症性肠病的人类的微生物群会改变肠道 Th17 和 RORγt+ 调节性 T 细胞的平衡,并加剧小鼠的结肠炎。

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作者:Graham J Britton ,Eduardo J Contijoch ,Ilaria Mogno ,Olivia H Vennaro ,Sean R Llewellyn ,Ruby Ng ,Zhihua Li ,Arthur Mortha ,Miriam Merad ,Anuk Das ,Dirk Gevers ,Dermot P B McGovern ,Namita Singh ,Jonathan Braun ,Jonathan P Jacobs ,Jose C Clemente ,Ari Grinspan ,Bruce E Sands ,Jean-Frederic Colombel ,Marla C Dubinsky ,Jeremiah J Faith

Abstract

Microbiota are thought to influence the development and progression of inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), but determining generalizable effects of microbiota on IBD etiology requires larger-scale functional analyses. We colonized germ-free mice with intestinal microbiotas from 30 healthy and IBD donors and determined the homeostatic intestinal T cell response to each microbiota. Compared to microbiotas from healthy donors, transfer of IBD microbiotas into germ-free mice increased numbers of intestinal Th17 cells and Th2 cells and decreased numbers of RORγt+ Treg cells. Colonization with IBD microbiotas exacerbated disease in a model where colitis is induced upon transfer of naive T cells into Rag1-/- mice. The proportions of Th17 and RORγt+ Treg cells induced by each microbiota were predictive of human disease status and accounted for disease severity in the Rag1-/- colitis model. Thus, an impact on intestinal Th17 and RORγt+ Treg cell compartments emerges as a unifying feature of IBD microbiotas, suggesting a general mechanism for microbial contribution to IBD pathogenesis.

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