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Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism

Anastomotic leakage is a major complication following colorectal surgery leading to peritonitis, complications, and mortality. Akkermansia muciniphila has shown beneficial effects on the gut barrier function. Whether A. muciniphila reduces peritonitis and mortality during colonic leakage is unknown....

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Autores principales: Bachmann, Radu, Van Hul, Matthias, Baldin, Pamela, Léonard, Daniel, Delzenne, Nathalie M., Belzer, Clara, Ouwerkerk, Janneke P., Repsilber, Dirk, Rangel, Ignacio, Kartheuser, Alex, Brummer, Robert Jan, De Vos, Willem M., Cani, Patrice D.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9454966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36078075
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11172666
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author Bachmann, Radu
Van Hul, Matthias
Baldin, Pamela
Léonard, Daniel
Delzenne, Nathalie M.
Belzer, Clara
Ouwerkerk, Janneke P.
Repsilber, Dirk
Rangel, Ignacio
Kartheuser, Alex
Brummer, Robert Jan
De Vos, Willem M.
Cani, Patrice D.
author_facet Bachmann, Radu
Van Hul, Matthias
Baldin, Pamela
Léonard, Daniel
Delzenne, Nathalie M.
Belzer, Clara
Ouwerkerk, Janneke P.
Repsilber, Dirk
Rangel, Ignacio
Kartheuser, Alex
Brummer, Robert Jan
De Vos, Willem M.
Cani, Patrice D.
author_sort Bachmann, Radu
collection PubMed
description Anastomotic leakage is a major complication following colorectal surgery leading to peritonitis, complications, and mortality. Akkermansia muciniphila has shown beneficial effects on the gut barrier function. Whether A. muciniphila reduces peritonitis and mortality during colonic leakage is unknown. Whether A. muciniphila can directly modulate the expression of genes in the colonic mucosa in humans has never been studied. We investigated the effects of a pretreatment (14 days) with live A. muciniphila prior to surgical colonic perforation on peritonitis, mortality, and wound healing. We used mice with an inducible intestinal-epithelial-cell-specific deletion of MyD88 (IEC-MyD88 KO) to investigate the role of the innate immune system in this context. In a proof-of-concept pilot study, healthy humans were exposed to A. muciniphila for 2 h and colonic biopsies taken before and after colonic instillation for transcriptomic analysis. Seven days after colonic perforation, A.-muciniphila-treated mice had significantly lower mortality and severity of peritonitis. This effect was associated with significant improvements of wound histological healing scores, higher production of IL22, but no changes in the mucus layer thickness or genes involved in cell renewal, proliferation, or differentiation. All these effects were abolished in IEC-MyD88 KO mice. Finally, human subjects exposed to A. muciniphila exhibited an increased level of the bacterium at the mucus level 2 h after instillation and significant changes in the expression of different genes involved in the regulation of cell cycling, gene transcription, immunity, and inflammation in their colonic mucosa. A. muciniphila improves wound healing during transmural colonic wall defect through mechanisms possibly involving IL22 signaling and requiring MyD88 in the intestinal cells. In healthy humans, colonic administration of A. muciniphila is well tolerated and changes the expression of genes involved in the immune pathways.
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spelling pubmed-94549662022-09-09 Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism Bachmann, Radu Van Hul, Matthias Baldin, Pamela Léonard, Daniel Delzenne, Nathalie M. Belzer, Clara Ouwerkerk, Janneke P. Repsilber, Dirk Rangel, Ignacio Kartheuser, Alex Brummer, Robert Jan De Vos, Willem M. Cani, Patrice D. Cells Article Anastomotic leakage is a major complication following colorectal surgery leading to peritonitis, complications, and mortality. Akkermansia muciniphila has shown beneficial effects on the gut barrier function. Whether A. muciniphila reduces peritonitis and mortality during colonic leakage is unknown. Whether A. muciniphila can directly modulate the expression of genes in the colonic mucosa in humans has never been studied. We investigated the effects of a pretreatment (14 days) with live A. muciniphila prior to surgical colonic perforation on peritonitis, mortality, and wound healing. We used mice with an inducible intestinal-epithelial-cell-specific deletion of MyD88 (IEC-MyD88 KO) to investigate the role of the innate immune system in this context. In a proof-of-concept pilot study, healthy humans were exposed to A. muciniphila for 2 h and colonic biopsies taken before and after colonic instillation for transcriptomic analysis. Seven days after colonic perforation, A.-muciniphila-treated mice had significantly lower mortality and severity of peritonitis. This effect was associated with significant improvements of wound histological healing scores, higher production of IL22, but no changes in the mucus layer thickness or genes involved in cell renewal, proliferation, or differentiation. All these effects were abolished in IEC-MyD88 KO mice. Finally, human subjects exposed to A. muciniphila exhibited an increased level of the bacterium at the mucus level 2 h after instillation and significant changes in the expression of different genes involved in the regulation of cell cycling, gene transcription, immunity, and inflammation in their colonic mucosa. A. muciniphila improves wound healing during transmural colonic wall defect through mechanisms possibly involving IL22 signaling and requiring MyD88 in the intestinal cells. In healthy humans, colonic administration of A. muciniphila is well tolerated and changes the expression of genes involved in the immune pathways. MDPI 2022-08-27 /pmc/articles/PMC9454966/ /pubmed/36078075 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11172666 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bachmann, Radu
Van Hul, Matthias
Baldin, Pamela
Léonard, Daniel
Delzenne, Nathalie M.
Belzer, Clara
Ouwerkerk, Janneke P.
Repsilber, Dirk
Rangel, Ignacio
Kartheuser, Alex
Brummer, Robert Jan
De Vos, Willem M.
Cani, Patrice D.
Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism
title Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism
title_full Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism
title_fullStr Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism
title_full_unstemmed Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism
title_short Akkermansia muciniphila Reduces Peritonitis and Improves Intestinal Tissue Wound Healing after a Colonic Transmural Defect by a MyD88-Dependent Mechanism
title_sort akkermansia muciniphila reduces peritonitis and improves intestinal tissue wound healing after a colonic transmural defect by a myd88-dependent mechanism
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9454966/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36078075
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cells11172666
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