Author
Listed:
- Mohammad Arifuzzaman
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Tae Hyung Won
(Cornell University)
- Ting-Ting Li
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Hiroshi Yano
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Sreehaas Digumarthi
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Andrea F. Heras
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Wen Zhang
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Christopher N. Parkhurst
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Sanchita Kashyap
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Wen-Bing Jin
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Gregory Garbès Putzel
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Amy M. Tsou
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine)
- Coco Chu
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Qianru Wei
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Alex Grier
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Stefan Worgall
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Chun-Jun Guo
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
- Frank C. Schroeder
(Cornell University)
- David Artis
(Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University)
Abstract
Dietary fibres can exert beneficial anti-inflammatory effects through microbially fermented short-chain fatty acid metabolites1,2, although the immunoregulatory roles of most fibre diets and their microbiota-derived metabolites remain poorly defined. Here, using microbial sequencing and untargeted metabolomics, we show that a diet of inulin fibre alters the composition of the mouse microbiota and the levels of microbiota-derived metabolites, notably bile acids. This metabolomic shift is associated with type 2 inflammation in the intestine and lungs, characterized by IL-33 production, activation of group 2 innate lymphoid cells and eosinophilia. Delivery of cholic acid mimics inulin-induced type 2 inflammation, whereas deletion of the bile acid receptor farnesoid X receptor diminishes the effects of inulin. The effects of inulin are microbiota dependent and were reproduced in mice colonized with human-derived microbiota. Furthermore, genetic deletion of a bile-acid-metabolizing enzyme in one bacterial species abolishes the ability of inulin to trigger type 2 inflammation. Finally, we demonstrate that inulin enhances allergen- and helminth-induced type 2 inflammation. Taken together, these data reveal that dietary inulin fibre triggers microbiota-derived cholic acid and type 2 inflammation at barrier surfaces with implications for understanding the pathophysiology of allergic inflammation, tissue protection and host defence.
Suggested Citation
Mohammad Arifuzzaman & Tae Hyung Won & Ting-Ting Li & Hiroshi Yano & Sreehaas Digumarthi & Andrea F. Heras & Wen Zhang & Christopher N. Parkhurst & Sanchita Kashyap & Wen-Bing Jin & Gregory Garbès Put, 2022.
"Inulin fibre promotes microbiota-derived bile acids and type 2 inflammation,"
Nature, Nature, vol. 611(7936), pages 578-584, November.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:nature:v:611:y:2022:i:7936:d:10.1038_s41586-022-05380-y
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-05380-y
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