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1.
Cell Rep ; 43(4): 114029, 2024 Apr 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38573852

ABSTRACT

The host-microbiota relationship has evolved to shape mammalian physiology, including immunity, metabolism, and development. Germ-free models are widely used to study microbial effects on host processes such as immunity. Here, we find that both germ-free and T cell-deficient mice exhibit a robust sebum secretion defect persisting across multiple generations despite microbial colonization and T cell repletion. These phenotypes are inherited by progeny conceived during in vitro fertilization using germ-free sperm and eggs, demonstrating that non-genetic information in the gametes is required for microbial-dependent phenotypic transmission. Accordingly, gene expression in early embryos derived from gametes from germ-free or T cell-deficient mice is strikingly and similarly altered. Our findings demonstrate that microbial- and immune-dependent regulation of non-genetic information in the gametes can transmit inherited phenotypes transgenerationally in mice. This mechanism could rapidly generate phenotypic diversity to enhance host adaptation to environmental perturbations.


Subject(s)
Microbiota , Phenotype , T-Lymphocytes , Animals , Mice , T-Lymphocytes/immunology , T-Lymphocytes/metabolism , Male , Female , Mice, Inbred C57BL
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38157943

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The cytokine TSLP promotes type 2 immune responses and can induce adipose loss by stimulating lipid loss from the skin through sebum secretion by sebaceous glands, which enhances the skin barrier. However, the mechanism by which TSLP upregulates sebaceous gland function is unknown. OBJECTIVES: This study investigated the mechanism by which TSLP stimulates sebum secretion and adipose loss. METHODS: RNA-sequencing analysis was performed on sebaceous glands isolated by laser capture microdissection and single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis was performed on sorted skin T cells. Sebocyte function was analyzed by histological analysis and sebum secretion in vivo and by measuring lipogenesis and proliferation in vitro. RESULTS: This study found that TSLP sequentially stimulated the expression of lipogenesis genes followed by cell death genes in sebaceous glands to induce holocrine secretion of sebum. TSLP did not affect sebaceous gland activity directly. Rather, single-cell RNA-sequencing revealed that TSLP recruited distinct T-cell clusters that produce IL-4 and IL-13, which were necessary for TSLP-induced adipose loss and sebum secretion. Moreover, IL-13 was sufficient to cause sebum secretion and adipose loss in vivo and to induce lipogenesis and proliferation of a human sebocyte cell line in vitro. CONCLUSIONS: This study proposes that TSLP stimulates T cells to deliver IL-4 and IL-13 to sebaceous glands, which enhances sebaceous gland function, turnover, and subsequent adipose loss.

4.
Sci Transl Med ; 15(718): eadh1469, 2023 10 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37851822

ABSTRACT

Leishmania braziliensis is a parasitic infection that can result in inflammation and skin injury with highly variable and unpredictable clinical outcomes. Here, we investigated the potential impact of microbiota on infection-induced inflammatory responses and disease resolution by conducting an integrated analysis of the skin microbiome and host transcriptome on a cohort of 62 patients infected with L. braziliensis. We found that overall bacterial burden and microbiome configurations dominated with Staphylococcus spp. were associated with delayed healing and enhanced inflammatory responses, especially by IL-1 family members. Quantification of host and bacterial transcripts on human lesions revealed that high lesional S. aureus transcript abundance was associated with delayed healing and increased expression of IL-1ß. This cytokine was critical for modulating disease outcomes in L. braziliensis-infected mice colonized with S. aureus, given that its neutralization reduced pathology and inflammation. These results highlight how the human microbiome can shape disease outcomes in cutaneous leishmaniasis and suggest pathways toward host-directed therapies to mitigate the inflammatory consequences.


Subject(s)
Leishmaniasis, Cutaneous , Microbiota , Humans , Mice , Animals , Staphylococcus aureus , Multiomics , Inflammation , Bacteria , Patient Acuity
5.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Jun 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37425836

ABSTRACT

Chronic wounds are a common and costly complication of diabetes, where multifactorial defects contribute to dysregulated skin repair, inflammation, tissue damage, and infection. We previously showed that aspects of the diabetic foot ulcer microbiota were correlated with poor healing outcomes, but many microbial species recovered remain uninvestigated with respect to wound healing. Here we focused on Alcaligenes faecalis , a Gram-negative bacterium that is frequently recovered from chronic wounds but rarely causes infection. Treatment of diabetic wounds with A. faecalis accelerated healing during early stages. We investigated the underlying mechanisms and found that A. faecalis treatment promotes re-epithelialization of diabetic keratinocytes, a process which is necessary for healing but deficient in chronic wounds. Overexpression of matrix metalloproteinases in diabetes contributes to failed epithelialization, and we found that A. faecalis treatment balances this overexpression to allow proper healing. This work uncovers a mechanism of bacterial-driven wound repair and provides a foundation for the development of microbiota-based wound interventions.

6.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37066207

ABSTRACT

The host-microbiota relationship has evolved to shape mammalian processes, including immunity, metabolism, and development 1-3 . Host phenotypes change in direct response to microbial exposures by the individual. Here we show that the microbiota induces phenotypic change not only in the individual but also in their succeeding generations of progeny. We found that germ-free mice exhibit a robust sebum secretion defect and transcriptional changes in various organs, persisting across multiple generations despite microbial colonization and breeding with conventional mice. Host-microbe interactions could be involved in this process, since T cell-deficient mice, which display defective sebum secretion 4 , also transgenerationally transmit their phenotype to progeny. These phenotypes are inherited by progeny conceived during in vitro fertilization using germ-free sperm and eggs, demonstrating that epigenetic information in the gametes is required for phenotypic transmission. Accordingly, small non-coding RNAs that can regulate embryonic gene expression 5 were strikingly and similarly altered in gametes of germ-free and T cell-deficient mice. Thus, we have uncovered a novel mechanism whereby the microbiota and immune system induce phenotypic changes in successive generations of offspring. This epigenetic form of inheritance could be advantageous for host adaptation to environmental perturbation, where phenotypic diversity can be introduced more rapidly than by genetic mutation.

7.
medRxiv ; 2023 Feb 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36798406

ABSTRACT

Leishmania braziliensis infection results in inflammation and skin injury, with highly variable and unpredictable clinical outcomes. Here, we investigated the potential impact of microbiota on infection-induced inflammatory responses and disease resolution by conducting an integrated analysis of the skin microbiome and host transcriptome on a cohort of 62 L. braziliensis -infected patients. We found that overall bacterial burden and microbiome configurations dominated with Staphylococcus spp. were associated with delayed healing and enhanced inflammatory responses, especially by IL-1 family members. Dual RNA-seq of human lesions revealed that high lesional S. aureus transcript abundance was associated with delayed healing and increased expression of IL-1ß. This cytokine was critical for modulating disease outcome in L. braziliensis -infected mice colonized with S. aureus , as its neutralization reduced pathology and inflammation. These results implicate the microbiome in cutaneous leishmaniasis disease outcomes in humans and suggest host-directed therapies to mitigate the inflammatory consequences.

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