TY - JOUR
T1 - Inulin fibre promotes microbiota-derived bile acids and type 2 inflammation
AU - JRI IBD Live Cell Bank Consortium
AU - Arifuzzaman, Mohammad
AU - Won, Tae Hyung
AU - Li, Ting Ting
AU - Yano, Hiroshi
AU - Digumarthi, Sreehaas
AU - Heras, Andrea F.
AU - Zhang, Wen
AU - Parkhurst, Christopher N.
AU - Kashyap, Sanchita
AU - Jin, Wen Bing
AU - Putzel, Gregory Garbès
AU - Tsou, Amy M.
AU - Chu, Coco
AU - Wei, Qianru
AU - Grier, Alex
AU - Longman, Randy
AU - Sonnenberg, Gregory
AU - Scherl, Ellen
AU - Sockolow, Robbyn
AU - Lukin, Dana
AU - Battat, Robert
AU - Ciecierega, Thomas
AU - Solomon, Aliza
AU - Barfield, Elaine
AU - Chien, Kimberley
AU - Ferreira, Johanna
AU - Williams, Jasmin
AU - Khan, Shaira
AU - Chong, Peik Sean
AU - Mozumder, Samah
AU - Chou, Lance
AU - Zhou, Wenqing
AU - Ahmed, Anees
AU - Zhong, Connie
AU - Joseph, Ann
AU - Gladstone, Joseph
AU - Jensen, Samantha
AU - Worgall, Stefan
AU - Guo, Chun Jun
AU - Schroeder, Frank C.
AU - Artis, David
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2022/11/17
Y1 - 2022/11/17
N2 - Dietary fibres can exert beneficial anti-inflammatory effects through microbially fermented short-chain fatty acid metabolites1,2, although the immunoregulatory roles of most fibre diets and their microbiota-derived metabolites remain poorly defined. Here, using microbial sequencing and untargeted metabolomics, we show that a diet of inulin fibre alters the composition of the mouse microbiota and the levels of microbiota-derived metabolites, notably bile acids. This metabolomic shift is associated with type 2 inflammation in the intestine and lungs, characterized by IL-33 production, activation of group 2 innate lymphoid cells and eosinophilia. Delivery of cholic acid mimics inulin-induced type 2 inflammation, whereas deletion of the bile acid receptor farnesoid X receptor diminishes the effects of inulin. The effects of inulin are microbiota dependent and were reproduced in mice colonized with human-derived microbiota. Furthermore, genetic deletion of a bile-acid-metabolizing enzyme in one bacterial species abolishes the ability of inulin to trigger type 2 inflammation. Finally, we demonstrate that inulin enhances allergen- and helminth-induced type 2 inflammation. Taken together, these data reveal that dietary inulin fibre triggers microbiota-derived cholic acid and type 2 inflammation at barrier surfaces with implications for understanding the pathophysiology of allergic inflammation, tissue protection and host defence.
AB - Dietary fibres can exert beneficial anti-inflammatory effects through microbially fermented short-chain fatty acid metabolites1,2, although the immunoregulatory roles of most fibre diets and their microbiota-derived metabolites remain poorly defined. Here, using microbial sequencing and untargeted metabolomics, we show that a diet of inulin fibre alters the composition of the mouse microbiota and the levels of microbiota-derived metabolites, notably bile acids. This metabolomic shift is associated with type 2 inflammation in the intestine and lungs, characterized by IL-33 production, activation of group 2 innate lymphoid cells and eosinophilia. Delivery of cholic acid mimics inulin-induced type 2 inflammation, whereas deletion of the bile acid receptor farnesoid X receptor diminishes the effects of inulin. The effects of inulin are microbiota dependent and were reproduced in mice colonized with human-derived microbiota. Furthermore, genetic deletion of a bile-acid-metabolizing enzyme in one bacterial species abolishes the ability of inulin to trigger type 2 inflammation. Finally, we demonstrate that inulin enhances allergen- and helminth-induced type 2 inflammation. Taken together, these data reveal that dietary inulin fibre triggers microbiota-derived cholic acid and type 2 inflammation at barrier surfaces with implications for understanding the pathophysiology of allergic inflammation, tissue protection and host defence.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85141124282&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41586-022-05380-y
DO - 10.1038/s41586-022-05380-y
M3 - Article
C2 - 36323778
AN - SCOPUS:85141124282
SN - 0028-0836
VL - 611
SP - 578
EP - 584
JO - Nature
JF - Nature
IS - 7936
ER -