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High-Fat Diet and Antibiotics Cooperatively Impair Mitochondrial Bioenergetics to Trigger Dysbiosis that Exacerbates Pre-inflammatory Bowel Disease

Lee, Jee-Yon; Cevallos, Stephanie A.; Byndloss, Mariana X.; Tiffany, Connor R.; Olsan, Erin E.; Butler, Brian P.; Young, Briana M.; Rogers, Andrew W. L.; Nguyen, Henry; Kim, Kyongchol; Choi, Sang-Woon; Bae, Eunsoo; Lee, Je Hee; Min, Ui-Gi; Lee, Duk-Chul; Bäumler, Andreas J.

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July 14, 2020

10.1016/j.chom.2020.06.001

Abstract:

The clinical spectra of irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) intersect to form a scantily defined overlap syndrome, termed pre-IBD. We show that increased Enterobacteriaceae and reduced Clostridia abundance distinguish the fecal microbiota of pre-IBD patients from IBS patients. A history of antibiotics in individuals consuming a high-fat diet was associated with the greatest risk for pre-IBD. Exposing mice to these risk factors resulted in conditions resembling pre-IBD and impaired mitochondrial bioenergetics in the colonic epithelium, which triggered dysbiosis. Restoring mitochondrial bioenergetics in the colonic epithelium with 5-amino salicylic acid, a PPAR-γ (peroxisome proliferator–activated receptor gamma) agonist that stimulates mitochondrial activity, ameliorated pre-IBD symptoms. As with patients, mice with pre-IBD exhibited notable expansions of Enterobacteriaceae that exacerbated low-grade mucosal inflammation, suggesting that remediating dysbiosis can alleviate inflammation. Thus, environmental risk factors cooperate to impair epithelial mitochondrial bioenergetics, thereby triggering microbiota disruptions that exacerbate inflammation and distinguish pre-IBD from IBS.

Automatic Tags

inflammatory bowel disease; high-fat diet; microbiota; irritable bowel syndrome; dysbiosis; antibiotics

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