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Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice

We previously observed that gut colonization by Candida albicans promoted serum antibody response to orally administered ovalbumin in mice. We therefore postulated that C. albicans affects oral tolerance induction. The present study tested this idea. BALB/c mice were intragastrically administered wi...

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Autores principales: SUGITA, Ryusuke, HATA, Erina, MIKI, Atsuko, ANDOH, Ryoko, UMEDA, Chisato, TAKEMURA, Naoki, SONOYAMA, Kei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Bioscience of Microbiota, Food and Health 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4034285/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24936353
http://dx.doi.org/10.12938/bmfh.31.77
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author SUGITA, Ryusuke
HATA, Erina
MIKI, Atsuko
ANDOH, Ryoko
UMEDA, Chisato
TAKEMURA, Naoki
SONOYAMA, Kei
author_facet SUGITA, Ryusuke
HATA, Erina
MIKI, Atsuko
ANDOH, Ryoko
UMEDA, Chisato
TAKEMURA, Naoki
SONOYAMA, Kei
author_sort SUGITA, Ryusuke
collection PubMed
description We previously observed that gut colonization by Candida albicans promoted serum antibody response to orally administered ovalbumin in mice. We therefore postulated that C. albicans affects oral tolerance induction. The present study tested this idea. BALB/c mice were intragastrically administered with either C. albicans (1 × 10(7)) or vehicle, and the colonization was confirmed by weekly fecal cultures. Mice were further divided into two subgroups and intragastrically administered with either ovalbumin (20 mg) or vehicle for five consecutive days. Thereafter, all mice were intraperitoneally immunized with ovalbumin in alum. In mice without C. albicans inoculation, ovalbumin feeding prior to immunization significantly suppressed the increase in ovalbumin-specific IgE, IgG1 and IgG2a in sera, suggesting oral tolerance induction. In C. albicans-inoculated mice, however, the antibody levels were the same between ovalbumin- and vehicle-fed mice. In contrast, ovalbumin feeding significantly suppressed cellular immune responses, as evidenced by reduced proliferation of splenocytes restimulated by ovalbumin ex vivo, in both C. albicans-inoculated and uninoculated mice. Ex vivo supplementation with neither heat-killed C. albicans nor the culture supernatant of C. albicans enhanced the production of ovalbumin-specific IgG1 in splenocytes restimulated by the antigen. These results suggest that gut colonization by C. albicans inhibits the induction of humoral immune tolerance to dietary antigen in mice, whereas C. albicans may not directly promote antibody production. We therefore propose that C. albicans gut colonization could be a risk factor for triggering food allergy in susceptible individuals.
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spelling pubmed-40342852014-06-16 Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice SUGITA, Ryusuke HATA, Erina MIKI, Atsuko ANDOH, Ryoko UMEDA, Chisato TAKEMURA, Naoki SONOYAMA, Kei Biosci Microbiota Food Health Full Paper We previously observed that gut colonization by Candida albicans promoted serum antibody response to orally administered ovalbumin in mice. We therefore postulated that C. albicans affects oral tolerance induction. The present study tested this idea. BALB/c mice were intragastrically administered with either C. albicans (1 × 10(7)) or vehicle, and the colonization was confirmed by weekly fecal cultures. Mice were further divided into two subgroups and intragastrically administered with either ovalbumin (20 mg) or vehicle for five consecutive days. Thereafter, all mice were intraperitoneally immunized with ovalbumin in alum. In mice without C. albicans inoculation, ovalbumin feeding prior to immunization significantly suppressed the increase in ovalbumin-specific IgE, IgG1 and IgG2a in sera, suggesting oral tolerance induction. In C. albicans-inoculated mice, however, the antibody levels were the same between ovalbumin- and vehicle-fed mice. In contrast, ovalbumin feeding significantly suppressed cellular immune responses, as evidenced by reduced proliferation of splenocytes restimulated by ovalbumin ex vivo, in both C. albicans-inoculated and uninoculated mice. Ex vivo supplementation with neither heat-killed C. albicans nor the culture supernatant of C. albicans enhanced the production of ovalbumin-specific IgG1 in splenocytes restimulated by the antigen. These results suggest that gut colonization by C. albicans inhibits the induction of humoral immune tolerance to dietary antigen in mice, whereas C. albicans may not directly promote antibody production. We therefore propose that C. albicans gut colonization could be a risk factor for triggering food allergy in susceptible individuals. Bioscience of Microbiota, Food and Health 2012-10-25 2012 /pmc/articles/PMC4034285/ /pubmed/24936353 http://dx.doi.org/10.12938/bmfh.31.77 Text en Bioscience of Microbiota, Food and Health http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives (by-nc-nd) License.
spellingShingle Full Paper
SUGITA, Ryusuke
HATA, Erina
MIKI, Atsuko
ANDOH, Ryoko
UMEDA, Chisato
TAKEMURA, Naoki
SONOYAMA, Kei
Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice
title Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice
title_full Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice
title_fullStr Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice
title_full_unstemmed Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice
title_short Gut Colonization by Candida albicans Inhibits the Induction of Humoral Immune Tolerance to Dietary Antigen in BALB/c Mice
title_sort gut colonization by candida albicans inhibits the induction of humoral immune tolerance to dietary antigen in balb/c mice
topic Full Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4034285/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24936353
http://dx.doi.org/10.12938/bmfh.31.77
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