Literature DB >> 25824839

Oral tolerance failure upon neonatal gut colonization with Escherichia coli producing the genotoxin colibactin.

Thomas Secher1, Delphine Payros1, Camille Brehin1, Michele Boury1, Claude Watrin1, Marion Gillet2, Isabelle Bernard-Cadenat3, Sandrine Menard2, Vassilia Theodorou2, Abdelhadi Saoudi3, Maiwenn Olier4, Eric Oswald5.   

Abstract

The intestinal barrier controls the balance between tolerance and immunity to luminal antigens. When this finely tuned equilibrium is deregulated, inflammatory disorders can occur. There is a concomitant increase, in urban populations of developed countries, of immune-mediated diseases along with a shift in Escherichia coli population from the declining phylogenetic group A to the newly dominant group B2, including commensal strains producing a genotoxin called colibactin that massively colonized the gut of neonates. Here, we showed that mother-to-offspring early gut colonization by colibactin-producing E. coli impairs intestinal permeability and enhances the transepithelial passage of luminal antigen, leading to an increased immune activation. Functionally, this was accompanied by a dramatic increase in local and systemic immune responses against a fed antigen, decreased regulatory T cell population, tolerogenic dendritic cells, and enhanced mucosal delayed-type hypersensitivity response. Conversely, the abolition of colibactin expression by mutagenesis abrogates the alteration of oral tolerance induced by neonatal colonization by E. coli. In conclusion, the vertical colonization by E. coli producing the genotoxin colibactin enhances intestinal translocation and subsequently alters oral tolerance. Thus, early colonization by E. coli from the newly dominant phylogenetic group B2, which produces colibactin, may represent a risk factor for the development of immune-mediated diseases.
Copyright © 2015, American Society for Microbiology. All Rights Reserved.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 25824839      PMCID: PMC4432747          DOI: 10.1128/IAI.00064-15

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Infect Immun        ISSN: 0019-9567            Impact factor:   3.441


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