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Physical Activity Shapes the Intestinal Microbiome and Immunity of Healthy Mice but Has No Protective Effects against Colitis in MUC2 <sup>−/−</sup> Mice

Mehrbod Estaki, Douglas W. Morck, Sanjoy Ghosh, Candice Quin, Jason Pither, Jacqueline A. Barnett, SK Gill, Deanna L. Gibson

2020mSystems19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Perturbation in the gut microbial ecosystem has been associated with various diseases, including inflammatory bowel disease. Habitual physical activity, through its ability to modulate the gut microbiome, has recently been shown to prophylactically protect against chemically induced models of murine colitis. Here, we (i) confirm previous reports that physical activity has limited but significant effects on the gut microbiome of mice and (ii) show that such changes are associated with anti-inflammatory states in the gut, such as increased production of beneficial short-chain fatty acids and lower levels of proinflammatory immune markers implicated in human colitis; however, we also show that (iii) these physical activity-derived benefits are completely lost in the absence of a healthy intestinal mucus layer, a hallmark phenotype of human colitis.

Topics & Concepts

MicrobiomeImmunityColitisImmunologyImmune systemMedicineMicrobiologyBiologyBioinformaticsGut microbiota and healthDiet and metabolism studiesTryptophan and brain disorders