@article{e560595848db40bf89e2b982a1e940e6,
title = "Immunoglobulin A coating identifies colitogenic bacteria in inflammatory bowel disease",
abstract = "Specific members of the intestinal microbiota dramatically affect inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in mice. In humans, however, identifying bacteria that preferentially affect disease susceptibility and severity remains a major challenge. Here, we used flow-cytometry-based bacterial cell sorting and 16S sequencing to characterize taxa-specific coating of the intestinal microbiota with immunoglobulin A (IgA-SEQ) and show that high IgA coating uniquely identifies colitogenic intestinal bacteria in a mouse model of microbiota-driven colitis. We then used IgA-SEQ and extensive anaerobic culturing of fecal bacteria from IBD patients to create personalized disease-associated gut microbiota culture collections with predefined levels of IgA coating. Using these collections, we found that intestinal bacteria selected on the basis of high coating with IgA conferred dramatic susceptibility to colitis in germ-free mice. Thus, our studies suggest that IgA coating identifies inflammatory commensals that preferentially drive intestinal disease. Targeted elimination of such bacteria may reduce, reverse, or even prevent disease development.",
author = "Palm, {Noah W.} and {De Zoete}, {Marcel R.} and Cullen, {Thomas W.} and Barry, {Natasha A.} and Jonathan Stefanowski and Liming Hao and Degnan, {Patrick H.} and Jianzhong Hu and Inga Peter and Wei Zhang and Elizabeth Ruggiero and Cho, {Judy H.} and Goodman, {Andrew L.} and Flavell, {Richard A.}",
note = "Funding Information: The authors thank members of the Flavell laboratory and A.M. Rhebergen for useful advice, discussions, and review of the manuscript; T. Taylor for cell sorting expertise; and A. Shade for guidance on 16S sequencing analysis. This work was supported by a Rubicon Fellowship from the Netherlands Organization of Scientific Research (M.R.d.Z.), the Cancer Research Institute Irvington Fellowship Program and NIH T32 AR 7107-37 (N.W.P.), NIDDK grant K01DK094986 and a CCFA Career Development Award (J.H.), the New York Crohn{\textquoteright}s Foundation (I.P.), NIH grants U01 DK062422, R01 DK092235, and a SUCCESS grant (J.C.), NIH grants GM103574 and GM105456 (A.L.G.), the Blavatnik Family Foundation and the Department of Defense (W81XWH-11-1-0745) (R.A.F.), and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute (R.A.F. and M.R.d.Z.). R.A.F., M.R.d.Z., and N.W.P. have filed a patent application related to this work. ",
year = "2014",
month = aug,
day = "28",
doi = "10.1016/j.cell.2014.08.006",
language = "English",
volume = "158",
pages = "1000--1010",
journal = "Cell",
issn = "0092-8674",
publisher = "Elsevier B.V.",
number = "5",
}