A diet-microbial metabolism feedforward loop modulates intestinal stem cell renewal in the stressed gut.
Yuanlong HouWei WeiXiaojing GuanYali LiuGaorui BianDandan HeQilin FanXiaoying CaiYouying ZhangGuangji WangXiao ZhengHai-Ping HaoPublished in: Nature communications (2021)
Dietary patterns and psychosocial factors, ubiquitous part of modern lifestyle, critically shape the gut microbiota and human health. However, it remains obscure how dietary and psychosocial inputs coordinately modulate the gut microbiota and host impact. Here, we show that dietary raffinose metabolism to fructose couples stress-induced gut microbial remodeling to intestinal stem cells (ISC) renewal and epithelial homeostasis. Chow diet (CD) and purified diet (PD) confer distinct vulnerability to gut epithelial injury, microbial alternation and ISC dysfunction in chronically restrained mice. CD preferably enriches Lactobacillus reuteri, and its colonization is sufficient to rescue stress-triggered epithelial injury. Mechanistically, dietary raffinose sustains Lactobacillus reuteri growth, which in turn metabolizes raffinose to fructose and thereby constituting a feedforward metabolic loop favoring ISC maintenance during stress. Fructose augments and engages glycolysis to fuel ISC proliferation. Our data reveal a diet-stress interplay that dictates microbial metabolism-shaped ISC turnover and is exploitable for alleviating gut disorders.
Keyphrases
- stress induced
- stem cells
- weight loss
- physical activity
- microbial community
- human health
- risk assessment
- climate change
- cardiovascular disease
- metabolic syndrome
- transcription factor
- mental health
- gene expression
- signaling pathway
- mesenchymal stem cells
- genome wide
- single cell
- electronic health record
- skeletal muscle
- machine learning
- big data
- bone mineral density
- insulin resistance
- intimate partner violence
- adipose tissue
- dna methylation
- single molecule