Rationally designed bacterial consortia to treat chronic immune-mediated colitis and restore intestinal homeostasis.
Daniel van der LelieAkihiko OkaSafiyh TaghaviJunji UmenoTing-Jia FanKatherine E MerrellSarah D WatsonLisa OuelletteBo LiuMuyiwa AwoniyiYunjia LaiLiang ChiKun LuChristopher S HenryR Balfour SartorPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Environmental factors, mucosal permeability and defective immunoregulation drive overactive immunity to a subset of resident intestinal bacteria that mediate multiple inflammatory conditions. GUT-103 and GUT-108, live biotherapeutic products rationally designed to complement missing or underrepresented functions in the dysbiotic microbiome of IBD patients, address upstream targets, rather than targeting a single cytokine to block downstream inflammation responses. GUT-103, composed of 17 strains that synergistically provide protective and sustained engraftment in the IBD inflammatory environment, prevented and treated chronic immune-mediated colitis. Therapeutic application of GUT-108 reversed established colitis in a humanized chronic T cell-mediated mouse model. It decreased pathobionts while expanding resident protective bacteria; produced metabolites promoting mucosal healing and immunoregulatory responses; decreased inflammatory cytokines and Th-1 and Th-17 cells; and induced interleukin-10-producing colonic regulatory cells, and IL-10-independent homeostatic pathways. We propose GUT-108 for treating and preventing relapse for IBD and other inflammatory conditions characterized by unbalanced microbiota and mucosal permeability.
Keyphrases
- ulcerative colitis
- induced apoptosis
- oxidative stress
- mouse model
- cell cycle arrest
- end stage renal disease
- newly diagnosed
- patient safety
- chronic kidney disease
- diabetic rats
- ejection fraction
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- drug induced
- patient reported outcomes
- drug delivery
- high glucose
- peritoneal dialysis
- signaling pathway
- cancer therapy
- emergency medicine