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1.
Biofactors ; 48(2): 329-341, 2022 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34665899

RESUMEN

Gut dysbiosis is an important modifier of pathologies including cardiovascular disease but our understanding of the role of individual microbes is limited. Here, we have used transplantation of mouse microbiota into microbiota-deficient zebrafish larvae to study the interaction between members of a mammalian high fat diet-associated gut microbiota with a lipid rich diet challenge in a tractable model species. We find zebrafish larvae are more susceptible to hyperlipidaemia when exposed to the mouse high fat-diet-associated microbiota and that this effect can be driven by two individual bacterial species fractionated from the mouse high fat-diet-associated microbiota. We find Stenotrophomonas maltophilia increases the hyperlipidaemic potential of chicken egg yolk to zebrafish larvae independent of direct interaction between S. maltophilia and the zebrafish host. Colonization by live, or exposure to heat-killed, Enterococcus faecalis accelerates hyperlipidaemia via host MyD88 signaling. The hyperlipidaemic effect is replicated by exposure to the Gram-positive toll-like receptor agonists peptidoglycan and lipoteichoic acid in a MyD88-dependent manner. In this work, we demonstrate the applicability of zebrafish as a tractable host for the identification of gut microbes that can induce conditional host phenotypes via microbiota transplantation and subsequent challenge with a high fat diet.


Asunto(s)
Hiperlipidemias , Microbiota , Aceleración , Animales , Pared Celular , Dieta Alta en Grasa/efectos adversos , Hiperlipidemias/genética , Larva , Mamíferos , Ratones , Factor 88 de Diferenciación Mieloide/genética , Factor 88 de Diferenciación Mieloide/farmacología , Pez Cebra/genética , Pez Cebra/microbiología , Proteínas de Pez Cebra/farmacología
2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 19049, 2021 09 24.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34561530

RESUMEN

Hyperglycaemia damages the microvasculature in part through the reduced recruitment of immune cells and interference with platelet signalling, leading to poor wound healing and accelerated lipid deposition in mammals. We investigated the utility of zebrafish larvae to model the effect of exogenous glucose on neutrophil and macrophage recruitment to a tail wound, wound-induced haemostasis, and chicken egg yolk feed challenge-induced hyperlipidaemia by supplementing larvae with exogenous glucose by immersion or injection. Neither method of glucose supplementation affected the recruitment of neutrophils and macrophages following tail transection. Glucose injection reduced thrombocyte retention and fibrin plug formation while only thrombocyte retention was reduced by glucose immersion following tail transection. We observed accelerated lipid accumulation in glucose-injected larvae challenged with high fat chicken egg yolk feeding. Our study identifies conserved and divergent effects of high glucose on inflammation, haemostasis, and hyperlipidaemia in zebrafish larvae compared to mammals.


Asunto(s)
Dieta , Glucosa/farmacología , Hemostasis/efectos de los fármacos , Hiperlipidemias/prevención & control , Pez Cebra/crecimiento & desarrollo , Animales , Yema de Huevo
3.
Curr Res Immunol ; 2: 229-236, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35492390

RESUMEN

Cigarette smoke (CS)-induced inflammation leads to a range of diseases including chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and cancer. The gut microbiota is a major modifying environmental factor that determine the severity of cigarette smoke-induced pathology. Microbiomes and metabolites from CS-exposed mice exacerbate lung inflammation via the gut-lung axis of shared mucosal immunity in mice but these systems are expensive to establish and analyse. Zebrafish embryos and larvae have been used to model the effects of cigarette smoking on a range of physiological processes and offer an amenable platform for screening modifiers of cigarette smoke-induced pathologies with key features of low cost and rapid visual readouts. Here we exposed zebrafish larvae to cigarette smoke extract (CSE) and characterised a CSE-induced leukocytic inflammatory phenotype with increased neutrophilic and macrophage inflammation in the gut. The CSE-induced phenotype was exacerbated by co-exposure to microbiota from the faeces of CS-exposed mice, but not control mice. Microbiota could be recovered from the gut of zebrafish and studied in isolation in a screening setting. This demonstrates the utility of the zebrafish-CSE exposure platform for identifying environmental modifiers of cigarette smoking-associated pathology and demonstrates that the CS-exposed mouse gut microbiota potentiates the inflammatory effects of CSE across host species.

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