具有免疫能力的人体肠道微生理系统可通过普氏粪杆菌调节炎症。

IF 7.8 1区 生物学 Q1 BIOTECHNOLOGY & APPLIED MICROBIOLOGY npj Biofilms and Microbiomes Pub Date : 2024-03-29 DOI:10.1038/s41522-024-00501-z
Jianbo Zhang, Yu-Ja Huang, Martin Trapecar, Charles Wright, Kirsten Schneider, John Kemmitt, Victor Hernandez-Gordillo, Jun Young Yoon, Mathilde Poyet, Eric J Alm, David T Breault, David L Trumper, Linda G Griffith
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引用次数: 0

摘要

微生物与人体肠道上皮细胞和免疫细胞之间的相互作用对肠道健康至关重要。然而,目前还没有一种系统可以将人类先天性免疫细胞与上皮细胞和不耐受氧气的共生微生物长期共培养,这阻碍了人们以可控的方式了解微生物与免疫之间的相互作用。在这里,我们建立了一个肠道上皮-微生物-免疫(GuMI)微生理系统,以维持Faecalibacterium prausnitzii/Faecalibacterium duncaniae与结肠上皮、抗原递呈细胞(APCs,这里指树突状细胞和巨噬细胞)以及在结肠上皮下循环的CD4+幼稚T细胞长期持续共培养。在 GuMI-APC 条件下,多重细胞因子检测表明,与缺乏 APC 的 GuMI 条件相比,APC 促使分泌到顶端和基底侧的细胞因子和趋化因子水平升高。与不含细菌的 GuMI-APC (GuMI-APC-NB)相比,在含 F. prausnitzii 的 GuMI-APC (GuMI-APC-FP)中,F. prausnitzii 增加了结肠上皮细胞中促炎基因(如 toll-like receptor 1 (TLR1) 和 interferon alpha 1 (IFNA1))的转录,但对细胞因子的分泌没有显著影响。相反,与缺乏 T 细胞的 GuMI-APC-FP 相比,在有 CD4+ 天真 T 细胞(GuMI-APCT-FP)存在的情况下,TLR1、IFNA1 和 IDO1 的转录水平降低,同时 F. prausnitzi 诱导的促炎细胞因子(如 IL8)分泌增加。这些结果凸显了个体先天性免疫细胞在调节肠道寄生虫 F. prausnitzii 引发的免疫反应中的作用。在肠道微生理系统中整合确定的免疫细胞群证明了 GuMI 仿生平台在研究健康和疾病条件下微生物-上皮-免疫相互作用方面的实用性。
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An immune-competent human gut microphysiological system enables inflammation-modulation by Faecalibacterium prausnitzii.

Crosstalk of microbes with human gut epithelia and immune cells is crucial for gut health. However, there is no existing system for a long-term co-culture of human innate immune cells with epithelium and oxygen-intolerant commensal microbes, hindering the understanding of microbe-immune interactions in a controlled manner. Here, we established a gut epithelium-microbe-immune (GuMI) microphysiological system to maintain the long-term continuous co-culture of Faecalibacterium prausnitzii/Faecalibacterium duncaniae with colonic epithelium, antigen-presenting cells (APCs, herein dendritic cells and macrophages), and CD4+ naive T cells circulating underneath the colonic epithelium. In GuMI-APC condition, multiplex cytokine assays suggested that APCs contribute to the elevated level of cytokines and chemokines secreted into both apical and basolateral compartments compared to GuMI condition that lacks APC. In GuMI-APC with F. prausnitzii (GuMI-APC-FP), F. prausnitzii increased the transcription of pro-inflammatory genes such as toll-like receptor 1 (TLR1) and interferon alpha 1 (IFNA1) in the colonic epithelium, without a significant effect on cytokine secretion, compared to the GuMI-APC without bacteria (GuMI-APC-NB). In contrast, in the presence of CD4+ naive T cells (GuMI-APCT-FP), TLR1, IFNA1, and IDO1 transcription levels decreased with a simultaneous increase in F. prausnitzii-induced secretion of pro-inflammatory cytokines (e.g., IL8) compared to GuMI-APC-FP that lacks T cells. These results highlight the contribution of individual innate immune cells in regulating the immune response triggered by the gut commensal F. prausnitzii. The integration of defined populations of immune cells in the gut microphysiological system demonstrated the usefulness of GuMI physiomimetic platform to study microbe-epithelial-immune interactions in healthy and disease conditions.

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来源期刊
npj Biofilms and Microbiomes
npj Biofilms and Microbiomes Immunology and Microbiology-Microbiology
CiteScore
12.10
自引率
3.30%
发文量
91
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊介绍: npj Biofilms and Microbiomes is a comprehensive platform that promotes research on biofilms and microbiomes across various scientific disciplines. The journal facilitates cross-disciplinary discussions to enhance our understanding of the biology, ecology, and communal functions of biofilms, populations, and communities. It also focuses on applications in the medical, environmental, and engineering domains. The scope of the journal encompasses all aspects of the field, ranging from cell-cell communication and single cell interactions to the microbiomes of humans, animals, plants, and natural and built environments. The journal also welcomes research on the virome, phageome, mycome, and fungome. It publishes both applied science and theoretical work. As an open access and interdisciplinary journal, its primary goal is to publish significant scientific advancements in microbial biofilms and microbiomes. The journal enables discussions that span multiple disciplines and contributes to our understanding of the social behavior of microbial biofilm populations and communities, and their impact on life, human health, and the environment.
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