Effect of gluten-free diet and antibiotics on murine gut microbiota and immune response to tetanus vaccination.
Pernille KihlLukasz KrychLing DengLars H HansenKarsten BuschardSøren SkovDennis S NielsenAxel Kornerup HansenPublished in: PloS one (2022)
The purpose of this study was to compare the effect of a gluten-free diet and/or antibiotics on tetanus vaccine induced immunoglobulin G titers and immune cell levels in BALB/c mice. The gluten-free diet was associated with a reduced anti-tetanus IgG response, and it increased the relative abundance of the anti-inflammatory Bifidobacterium significantly in some of the mice. Antibiotics also led to gut microbiota changes and lower initial vaccine titer. After a second vaccination, neither gluten-free diet nor antibiotics reduced the titers. In the spleen, the gluten-free diet significantly increased regulatory T cell (Treg) fractions, CD4+ T cell activation, and tolerogenic dendritic cell fractions and activation, which extend the downregulating effect of the Treg. Therefore, the systemic effect of the gluten-free diet seems mainly tolerogenic. Antibiotics reduced the fractions of CD4+ T and B cells in the mesenteric lymph nodes. These results suggest that vaccine response in mice is under influence of their diet, the gut microbiota and the interplay between them. However, a gluten-free diet seems to work through mechanisms different from those induced by antibiotics. Therefore, diet should be considered when testing vaccines in mice and developing vaccines for humans.
Keyphrases
- weight loss
- physical activity
- dendritic cells
- celiac disease
- immune response
- regulatory t cells
- lymph node
- irritable bowel syndrome
- high fat diet induced
- anti inflammatory
- oxidative stress
- type diabetes
- transcription factor
- microbial community
- skeletal muscle
- toll like receptor
- inflammatory response
- wastewater treatment