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Amelioration of Colitis by a Gut Bacterial Consortium Producing Anti-Inflammatory Secondary Bile Acids

Chunhua Zhou, Ying Wang, Cun Li, Zhi Xie, Lei Dai

2023Microbiology Spectrum50 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Secondary bile acids have been reported to be anti-inflammatory, yet it remains to be studied whether introducing selected bacteria strains to restore bile acid metabolism of the gut microbiome can alleviate intestinal inflammation. To address this gap, we designed a consortium of human gut bacterial strains based on their metabolic capacity to produce secondary bile acids UDCA and LCA, and we evaluated the efficacy of single bacterial strains and the bacterial consortium in treating the murine colitis model. We found that oral gavage of the bacterial consortium to mice restored secondary bile acid metabolism to increase levels of UDCA and LCA, which induced the activation of TGR5 to improve gut-barrier integrity and reduced the inflammation in murine colitis. Overall, our study demonstrates that rationally designed bacterial consortia can reshape the metabolism of the gut microbiome and provides novel insights into the application of live biotherapeutics for treating IBD.

Topics & Concepts

Bile acidUrsodeoxycholic acidDysbiosisBacteroides fragilisGut floraDeoxycholic acidBacteroidesChenodeoxycholic acidMicrobiologyColitisLithocholic acidMicrobiomeChemistryBiologyBiochemistryMedicineInternal medicineBacteriaAntibioticsBioinformaticsGeneticsGut microbiota and healthClostridium difficile and Clostridium perfringens researchDrug Transport and Resistance Mechanisms
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