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Probiotic Properties of Escherichia coli Nissle in Human Intestinal Organoids

Suman Pradhan, Alison A. Weiss

2020mBio84 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Probiotic, or beneficial, bacteria, such as E. coli Nissle, hold promise for the treatment of human disease. More study is needed to fully realize the potential of probiotics. Safety and efficacy studies are critically important; however, mice are poor models for many human intestinal diseases. We used stem cell-derived human intestinal organoid tissues to evaluate the safety of Nissle and its ability to protect from pathogenic E. coli bacteria. Nissle was found to be safe. Human intestinal tissues were not harmed by the Nissle bacteria introduced into the digestive tract. In contrast, pathogenic E. coli bacteria destroyed the intestinal tissues, and importantly, Nissle conferred protection from the pathogenic E. coli bacteria. Nissle did not kill the pathogenic E. coli bacteria, and protection likely occurred via the activation of human defenses. Human intestinal tissues provide a powerful way to study complex host-microbe interactions.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiologyBacteriaProbioticEscherichia coliPathogenic bacteriaOrganoidBiologyIntestinal mucosaHuman gastrointestinal tractMedicineCell biologyGeneBiochemistryGeneticsInternal medicineEscherichia coli research studiesViral gastroenteritis research and epidemiologyGut microbiota and health
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