Frazer Institute, Faculty of Medicine, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Department of Medicine and Therapeutics, the Chinese University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China.
Gut Microbes. 2023 Jan-Dec;15(1):2172670. doi: 10.1080/19490976.2023.2172670.
Food additives have been linked to the pro-inflammatory microbial dysbiosis associated with Crohn's disease (CD) but the underlying ecological dynamics are unknown. Here, we examine how selection of food additives affects the growth of multiple strains of a key beneficial bacterium (), axenic clinical isolates of proinflammatory bacteria from CD patients (, and spp.), and the consortia of mucosa-associated microbiota recovered from multiple Crohn's disease patients. Bacterial growth of the axenic isolates was evaluated using a habitat-simulating medium supplemented with either sodium sulfite, aluminum silicate, carrageenan, carboxymethylcellulose, polysorbate 80, saccharin, sucralose, or aspartame, intended to approximate concentrations found in food. The microbial consortia recovered from post-operative CD patient mucosal biopsy samples were challenged with either carboxymethylcellulose and/or polysorbate 80, and the bacterial communities compared to unchallenged consortia by 16S rRNA gene amplicon profiling. Growth of all strains was arrested when either sodium sulfite or polysorbate 80 was added to cultures at baseline or mid-exponential phase of growth, and the inhibitory effects on the Gram-negative bacteria by sodium sulfite were conditional on oxygen availability. The effects from polysorbate 80, saccharin, carrageenan, and/or carboxymethylcellulose on these bacteria were strain-specific. In addition to their direct effects on bacterial growth, polysorbate 80 and/or carboxymethylcellulose can drive profound changes in the CD mucosa-associated microbiota via niche expansion of and/or - both implicated in early Crohn's disease recurrence. These studies on the interaction of food additives with the enteric microbiota provide a basis for dietary management in Crohn's disease.
食品添加剂与克罗恩病(CD)相关的促炎微生物失调有关,但潜在的生态动力学尚不清楚。在这里,我们研究了食品添加剂的选择如何影响关键有益细菌()的多个菌株的生长,来自 CD 患者的无菌临床分离株的促炎细菌(、和 spp.),以及从多个克罗恩病患者中回收的粘膜相关微生物群落。使用模拟栖息地的培养基评估无菌分离株的细菌生长,该培养基补充了亚硫酸钠、硅酸铝、卡拉胶、羧甲基纤维素、聚山梨酯 80、糖精、三氯蔗糖或阿斯巴甜,旨在近似于食物中发现的浓度。用羧甲基纤维素和/或聚山梨酯 80 挑战从术后 CD 患者粘膜活检样本中回收的微生物群落,并通过 16S rRNA 基因扩增子分析将细菌群落与未受挑战的群落进行比较。当亚硫酸钠或聚山梨酯 80 在基线或生长的中指数期添加到培养物中时,所有 菌株的生长都被阻止,并且亚硫酸钠对革兰氏阴性菌的抑制作用取决于氧气的可用性。聚山梨酯 80、糖精、卡拉胶和/或羧甲基纤维素对这些细菌的影响是菌株特异性的。除了对细菌生长的直接影响外,聚山梨酯 80 和/或羧甲基纤维素还可以通过 和/或 - 两者都与早期克罗恩病复发有关 - 在 CD 粘膜相关微生物群中扩张,从而导致深刻的变化。这些关于食品添加剂与肠道微生物群相互作用的研究为克罗恩病的饮食管理提供了基础。