Project description:In the presented study, in order to unravel gut microbial community multiplicity and the influence of maternal milk nutrients (i.e., IgA) on gut mucosal microbiota onset and shaping, a mouse GM (MGM) was used as newborn study model to discuss genetic background and feeding modulation on gut microbiota in term of symbiosis, dysbiosis and rebiosis maintenance during early gut microbiota onset and programming after birth. Particularly, a bottom-up shotgun metaproteomic approach, combined with a computational pipeline, has been compred with a culturomics analysis of mouse gut microbiota, obtained by MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry (MS).
Project description:At birth, newborns are exposed to gut microbiota, which plays a critical role in host physiology. A reduced level of microbial diversity has been associated with necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC), one of the most deadly diseases in premature infants, but the underlying disease mechanisms are still poorly understood. Although the epithelial turnover of germ free mice is significantly delayed compared to conventionally raised mice, it remains unclear how gut microbiota exposure in the early postnatal period promotes stem cell renewal and differentiation. By analyzing genetic and experimental mouse models and performing single cell analysis, we demonstrate that gut microbiota promotes stem cell differentiation through the activation of critical stromal niche components. Our single cell analysis reveals that gut microbiota controls the size and heterogeneity of macrophage populations that secrete Wnt ligands, thereby maintaining the proliferation of intestinal telocytes, a recently identified gut mesenchymal stem cell niche. We show that stem cell differentiation, when impaired by antibiotic treatment promotes NEC, while treatment with Lactobacillus, which in NEC is dramatically less abundant, rescues NEC-like pathology through the activation of macrophage and telocyte niches. Our work highlights the mechanisms of how gut microbiota-facilitate mesenchymal niche proliferation which supports stem cell differentiation in early postnatal development.
Project description:Colonizing commensal bacteria after birth are required for the proper development of the gastrointestinal tract. It is believed that bacterial colonization pattern in neonatal gut affects gut barrier function and immune system maturation. Studies on the development of faecal flora microbiota in infants on various formula feeds showed that the neonatal gut was first colonized with enterococci followed by other flora microbiota such as Bifidobacterium in breast feeding infants. Intriguingly, Bjorksten group Other studies showed that Bbabies who developed allergy were less often colonized with Enterococcus during the first month of life as compared to healthy infants. A lot of Many studies have been done on conducted to elucidate how bifidobacteria or lactobacilli, some of which are considered probiotic, regulate infant gut immunity. However, much fewer studies have been focused on enterococi. In our study, we demonstrate that E. faecalis, isolated from healthy newborns, suppress inflammatory responses activated in vivo and in vitro. We found E. faecalis attenuates proinflammatory cytokine secretions, especially IL-8, through JNK and p38 signaling pathways. This finding shed light on how the first colonizer, E.faecalis, regulate inflammatory responses in the host. Samples are analysed using web-based GEArray Expression Analysis Suite