Department of Neurology, University of Louisville, Louisville, KY, 40202, USA.
Department of Neuroscience, University of South Florida, Tampa, USA.
Sci Rep. 2023 Apr 12;13(1):5945. doi: 10.1038/s41598-023-32594-5.
The gut microbiome is a potential non-genetic contributing factor for Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis. Differences in gut microbial communities have been detected between ALS subjects and healthy controls, including an increase in Escherichia coli in ALS subjects. E. coli and other gram-negative bacteria produce curli proteins, which are functional bacterial amyloids. We examined whether long-term curli overexposure in the gut can exacerbate the development and progression of ALS. We utilized the slow-developing hSOD1-G93A mouse model of ALS with their C57BL/6J WT littermate controls, including males and females, with a total of 91 animals. These mice were on a normal chow diet and fed curli-producing or curli-nonproducing (mutant) E. coli in applesauce (vehicle) 3 times/week, from 1 through 7 months of age. Male hSOD1 mice demonstrated gradual slowing in running speed month 4 onwards, while females exhibited no signs of locomotive impairment even at 7 months of age. Around the same time, male hSOD1 mice showed a gradual increase in frequency of peripheral CD19 B cells. Among the male hSOD1 group, chronic gut exposure to curli-producing E. coli led to significant shifts in α- and β-diversities. Curli-exposed males showed suppression of immune responses in circulation, but an increase in markers of inflammation, autophagy and protein turnover in skeletal muscle. Some of these markers were also changed in mutant E. coli-exposed mice, including astrogliosis in the brainstem and demyelination in the lumbar spinal cord. Overall, chronic overexposure to a commensal bacteria like E. coli led to distant organ pathology in our model, without the presence of a leaky gut at 6 months. Mechanisms underlying gut-distant organ communication are of tremendous interest to all disciplines.
肠道微生物组是肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS)的一个潜在非遗传致病因素。在 ALS 患者和健康对照者之间已经检测到肠道微生物群落的差异,包括 ALS 患者中大肠杆菌的增加。大肠杆菌和其他革兰氏阴性菌产生卷曲蛋白,这是功能性细菌淀粉样蛋白。我们研究了肠道中卷曲蛋白的长期过度暴露是否会加剧 ALS 的发展和进展。我们利用缓慢发展的 hSOD1-G93A ALS 小鼠模型及其 C57BL/6J WT 同窝对照(包括雄性和雌性),共 91 只动物。这些小鼠食用普通的维持饲料,并在苹果酱(载体)中 3 次/周喂养产生卷曲蛋白或不产生卷曲蛋白(突变)的大肠杆菌,从 1 个月到 7 个月大。雄性 hSOD1 小鼠在第 4 个月开始逐渐减慢跑步速度,而雌性甚至在 7 个月大时没有表现出运动障碍的迹象。大约在同一时间,雄性 hSOD1 小鼠外周血 CD19 B 细胞的频率逐渐增加。在雄性 hSOD1 组中,慢性肠道暴露于产生卷曲蛋白的大肠杆菌导致α和β多样性的显著变化。卷曲蛋白暴露的雄性小鼠表现出循环中免疫反应的抑制,但在骨骼肌中炎症、自噬和蛋白质周转的标志物增加。在突变大肠杆菌暴露的小鼠中,也发生了一些标志物的变化,包括脑干中的星形胶质细胞增生和腰椎脊髓的脱髓鞘。总的来说,在我们的模型中,慢性过度暴露于像大肠杆菌这样的共生细菌会导致远处器官的病理变化,而在 6 个月时没有肠道通透性增加的情况。肠道与远处器官之间通讯的机制是所有学科都非常感兴趣的。