Department of Food Quality and Nutrition, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund Mach, San Michele all'Adige, Trento, Italy.
Department of Food Quality and Nutrition, Research and Innovation Centre, Fondazione Edmund Mach, San Michele all'Adige, Trento, Italy.
J Autoimmun. 2018 Aug;92:12-34. doi: 10.1016/j.jaut.2018.05.008. Epub 2018 Jun 1.
Unresolved low grade systemic inflammation represents the underlying pathological mechanism driving immune and metabolic pathways involved in autoimmune diseases (AID). Mechanistic studies in animal models of AID and observational studies in patients have found alterations in gut microbiota communities and their metabolites, suggesting a microbial contribution to the onset or progression of AID. The gut microbiota and its metabolites have been shown to influence immune functions and immune homeostasis both within the gut and systematically. Microbial derived-short chain fatty acid (SCFA) and bio-transformed bile acid (BA) have been shown to influence the immune system acting as ligands specific cell signaling receptors like GPRCs, TGR5 and FXR, or via epigenetic processes. Similarly, intestinal permeability (leaky gut) and bacterial translocation are important contributors to chronic systemic inflammation and, without repair of the intestinal barrier, might represent a continuous inflammatory stimulus capable of triggering autoimmune processes. Recent studies indicate gender-specific differences in immunity, with the gut microbiota shaping and being concomitantly shaped by the hormonal milieu governing differences between the sexes. A bi-directional cross-talk between microbiota and the endocrine system is emerging with bacteria being able to produce hormones (e.g. serotonin, dopamine and somatostatine), respond to host hormones (e.g. estrogens) and regulate host hormones' homeostasis (e.g by inhibiting gene prolactin transcription or converting glucocorticoids to androgens). We review herein how gut microbiota and its metabolites regulate immune function, intestinal permeability and possibly AID pathological processes. Further, we describe the dysbiosis within the gut microbiota observed in different AID and speculate how restoring gut microbiota composition and its regulatory metabolites by dietary intervention including prebiotics and probiotics could help in preventing or ameliorating AID. Finally, we suggest that, given consistent observations of microbiota dysbiosis associated with AID and the ability of SCFA and BA to regulate intestinal permeability and inflammation, further mechanistic studies, examining how dietary microbiota modulation can protect against AID, hold considerable potential to tackle increased incidence of AID at the population level.
未解决的低度全身炎症代表了驱动自身免疫性疾病(AID)相关免疫和代谢途径的潜在病理机制。AID 动物模型的机制研究和患者的观察性研究发现,肠道微生物群落及其代谢物发生改变,提示微生物对 AID 的发生或进展有贡献。肠道微生物群及其代谢物已被证明可以影响肠道内和系统性的免疫功能和免疫稳态。微生物衍生的短链脂肪酸(SCFA)和生物转化的胆汁酸(BA)已被证明可以通过特定于细胞信号传导受体(如 GPRCs、TGR5 和 FXR)或通过表观遗传过程作为配体来影响免疫系统。同样,肠道通透性(肠漏)和细菌易位是慢性全身炎症的重要因素,如果肠道屏障得不到修复,可能会持续引发炎症刺激,从而引发自身免疫过程。最近的研究表明,免疫功能存在性别特异性差异,肠道微生物群塑造并同时受到性别差异所调控的激素环境的影响。微生物群和内分泌系统之间的双向交叉对话正在出现,细菌能够产生激素(例如,血清素、多巴胺和生长抑素),对宿主激素(例如雌激素)作出反应,并调节宿主激素的稳态(例如,抑制催乳素基因转录或将糖皮质激素转化为雄激素)。本文综述了肠道微生物群及其代谢物如何调节免疫功能、肠道通透性以及可能的 AID 病理过程。此外,我们描述了不同 AID 中观察到的肠道微生物群失调,并推测通过饮食干预(包括益生元和益生菌)恢复肠道微生物群组成及其调节代谢物如何有助于预防或改善 AID。最后,我们认为,鉴于与 AID 相关的微生物群失调的一致观察结果以及 SCFA 和 BA 调节肠道通透性和炎症的能力,进一步研究饮食微生物群调节如何预防 AID 的机制具有很大的潜力,可以解决人群中 AID 发病率上升的问题。