Henschel Angela M, Cabrera Susanne M, Kaldunski Mary L, Jia Shuang, Geoffrey Rhonda, Roethle Mark F, Lam Vy, Chen Yi-Guang, Wang Xujing, Salzman Nita H, Hessner Martin J
The Max McGee National Research Center for Juvenile Diabetes at the Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States of America.
The Department of Pediatrics at the Medical College of Wisconsin, and The Children's Research Institute of Children's Hospital of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jan 2;13(1):e0190351. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0190351. eCollection 2018.
Environmental changes associated with modern lifestyles may underlie the rising incidence of Type 1 diabetes (T1D). Our previous studies of T1D families and the BioBreeding (BB) rat model have identified a peripheral inflammatory state that is associated with diabetes susceptibility, consistent with pattern recognition receptor ligation, but is independent of disease progression. Here, compared to control strains, islets of spontaneously diabetic BB DRlyp/lyp and diabetes inducible BB DR+/+ weanlings provided a standard cereal diet expressed a robust proinflammatory transcriptional program consistent with microbial antigen exposure that included numerous cytokines/chemokines. The dependence of this phenotype on diet and gastrointestinal microbiota was investigated by transitioning DR+/+ weanlings to a gluten-free hydrolyzed casein diet (HCD) or treating them with antibiotics to alter/reduce pattern recognition receptor ligand exposure. Bacterial 16S rRNA gene sequencing revealed that these treatments altered the ileal and cecal microbiota, increasing the Firmicutes:Bacteriodetes ratio and the relative abundances of lactobacilli and butyrate producing taxa. While these conditions did not normalize the inherent hyper-responsiveness of DR+/+ rat leukocytes to ex vivo TLR stimulation, they normalized plasma cytokine levels, plasma TLR4 activity levels, the proinflammatory islet transcriptome, and β-cell chemokine expression. In lymphopenic DRlyp/lyp rats, HCD reduced T1D incidence, and the introduction of gluten to this diet induced islet chemokine expression and abrogated protection from diabetes. Overall, these studies link BB rat islet-level immunocyte recruiting potential, as measured by β-cell chemokine expression, to a genetically controlled immune hyper-responsiveness and innate inflammatory state that can be modulated by diet and the intestinal microbiota.
与现代生活方式相关的环境变化可能是1型糖尿病(T1D)发病率上升的潜在原因。我们之前对T1D家族和生物繁殖(BB)大鼠模型的研究已经确定了一种与糖尿病易感性相关的外周炎症状态,这与模式识别受体的连接一致,但与疾病进展无关。在这里,与对照品系相比,自发性糖尿病BB DRlyp/lyp和糖尿病诱导性BB DR+/+断奶大鼠的胰岛在提供标准谷物饮食时表现出与微生物抗原暴露一致的强大促炎转录程序,其中包括多种细胞因子/趋化因子。通过将DR+/+断奶大鼠过渡到无麸质水解酪蛋白饮食(HCD)或用抗生素治疗以改变/减少模式识别受体配体暴露,研究了这种表型对饮食和胃肠道微生物群的依赖性。细菌16S rRNA基因测序显示,这些处理改变了回肠和盲肠微生物群,增加了厚壁菌门与拟杆菌门的比例以及乳酸杆菌和产生丁酸盐类群的相对丰度。虽然这些条件并没有使DR+/+大鼠白细胞对离体TLR刺激的固有高反应性恢复正常,但它们使血浆细胞因子水平、血浆TLR4活性水平、促炎胰岛转录组和β细胞趋化因子表达恢复正常。在淋巴细胞减少的DRlyp/lyp大鼠中,HCD降低了T1D发病率,并且在这种饮食中引入麸质会诱导胰岛趋化因子表达并消除对糖尿病的保护作用。总体而言,这些研究将通过β细胞趋化因子表达衡量的BB大鼠胰岛水平免疫细胞募集潜力与一种可由饮食和肠道微生物群调节的基因控制的免疫高反应性和先天性炎症状态联系起来。