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CFTR dysregulation drives active selection of the gut microbiome.

Citation
Meeker, S. M., et al. “Cftr Dysregulation Drives Active Selection Of The Gut Microbiome.”. Plos Pathogens, p. e1008251.
Center University of Washington
Author Stacey M Meeker, Kevin S Mears, Naseer Sangwan, Mitchell J Brittnacher, Eli J Weiss, Piper M Treuting, Nicholas Tolley, Christopher E Pope, Kyle R Hager, Anh T Vo, Jisun Paik, Charles W Frevert, Hillary S Hayden, Lucas R Hoffman, Samuel I Miller, Adeline M Hajjar
Abstract

Patients with cystic fibrosis (CF) have altered fecal microbiomes compared to those of healthy controls. The magnitude of this dysbiosis correlates with measures of CF gastrointestinal (GI) disease, including GI inflammation and nutrient malabsorption. However, whether this dysbiosis is caused by mutations in the CFTR gene, the underlying defect in CF, or whether CF-associated dysbiosis augments GI disease was not clear. To test the relationships between CFTR dysfunction, microbes, and intestinal health, we established a germ-free (GF) CF mouse model and demonstrated that CFTR gene mutations are sufficient to alter the GI microbiome. Furthermore, flow cytometric analysis demonstrated that colonized CF mice have increased mesenteric lymph node and spleen TH17+ cells compared with non-CF mice, suggesting that CFTR defects alter adaptive immune responses. Our findings demonstrate that CFTR mutations modulate both the host adaptive immune response and the intestinal microbiome.

Year of Publication
2020
Journal
PLoS pathogens
Volume
16
Issue
1
Number of Pages
e1008251
Date Published
12/2020
ISSN Number
1553-7374
DOI
10.1371/journal.ppat.1008251
Alternate Journal
PLoS Pathog
PMID
31961914
PMCID
PMC6994172
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