作者
Mohammad Arifuzzaman,Tae Hyung Won,Tingting Li,Hiroshi Yano,Sreehaas Digumarthi,Andrea Heras,Wen Zhang,Christopher N. Parkhurst,Sanchita Kashyap,Wen‐Bing Jin,Gregory G. Putzel,Amy M. Tsou,Coco Chu,Qianru Wei,Alex Grier,Randy Longman,Gregory F. Sonnenberg,Ellen Scherl,Robbyn Sockolow,Dana J. Lukin,Robert Battat,Thomas Ciecierega,Aliza Solomon,Elaine Barfield,Kimberley Chien,Johanna Ferreira,Jasmin Williams,Shaira Khan,Peik Sean Chong,Samah Mozumder,Lance Chou,Wenqing Zhou,Anees Ahmed,Connie Zhong,Ann Mary Joseph,Joseph Gladstone,Samantha N. Jensen,Stefan Worgall,Chun‐Jun Guo,Frank C. Schroeder,David Artis
摘要
Dietary fibres can exert beneficial anti-inflammatory effects through microbially fermented short-chain fatty acid metabolites1,2, although the immunoregulatory roles of most fibre diets and their microbiota-derived metabolites remain poorly defined. Here, using microbial sequencing and untargeted metabolomics, we show that a diet of inulin fibre alters the composition of the mouse microbiota and the levels of microbiota-derived metabolites, notably bile acids. This metabolomic shift is associated with type 2 inflammation in the intestine and lungs, characterized by IL-33 production, activation of group 2 innate lymphoid cells and eosinophilia. Delivery of cholic acid mimics inulin-induced type 2 inflammation, whereas deletion of the bile acid receptor farnesoid X receptor diminishes the effects of inulin. The effects of inulin are microbiota dependent and were reproduced in mice colonized with human-derived microbiota. Furthermore, genetic deletion of a bile-acid-metabolizing enzyme in one bacterial species abolishes the ability of inulin to trigger type 2 inflammation. Finally, we demonstrate that inulin enhances allergen- and helminth-induced type 2 inflammation. Taken together, these data reveal that dietary inulin fibre triggers microbiota-derived cholic acid and type 2 inflammation at barrier surfaces with implications for understanding the pathophysiology of allergic inflammation, tissue protection and host defence.