| Literature DB >> 27471720 |
Leah T Stiemsma1, Lisa A Reynolds2, Stuart E Turvey3, B Brett Finlay4.
Abstract
Developed countries have experienced a steady increase in atopic disease and disorders of immune dysregulation since the 1980s. This increase parallels a decrease in infectious diseases within the same time period, while developing countries seem to exhibit the opposite effect, with less immune dysregulation and a higher prevalence of infectious disease. The "hygiene hypothesis", proposed by Strachan in 1989, aimed to explain this peculiar generational rise in immune dysregulation. However, research over the past 10 years provides evidence connecting the commensal and symbiotic microbes (intestinal microbiota) and parasitic helminths with immune development, expanding the hygiene hypothesis into the "microflora" and "old friends" hypotheses, respectively. There is evidence that parasitic helminths and commensal microbial organisms co-evolved with the human immune system and that these organisms are vital in promoting normal immune development. Current research supports the potential for manipulation of the bacterial intestinal microbiota to treat and even prevent immune dysregulation in the form of atopic disease and other immune-mediated disorders (namely inflammatory bowel disease and type 1 diabetes). Both human and animal model research are crucial in understanding the mechanistic links between these intestinal microbes and helminth parasites, and the human immune system. Pro-, pre-, and synbiotic, as well as treatment with live helminth and excretory/secretory helminth product therapies, are all potential therapeutic options for the treatment and prevention of these diseases. In the future, therapeutics aimed at decreasing the prevalence of inflammatory bowel disease, type 1 diabetes, and atopic disorders will likely involve personalized microbiota and/or helminth treatments used early in life.Entities:
Keywords: atopic disease; helminths; inflammatory bowel disease; microbiota; type 1 diabetes
Year: 2015 PMID: 27471720 PMCID: PMC4918254 DOI: 10.2147/ITT.S61528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Immunotargets Ther ISSN: 2253-1556
Figure 1Timeline displaying key findings leading up to the proposal of the “hygiene hypothesis”, proposal of the “old friends” and “microflora” hypotheses, and key microbiological and immunological findings in support of these theories.
Abbreviation: Th, T-helper.
Helminth-based therapeutic studies
| Organism | Disease | Treatment | Description of effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mouse | OVA-alum and Der p1-alum (HDM allergen)-driven models of allergic airway inflammation | |||
| Mouse | OVA-alum-driven model of allergic airway inflammation | |||
| Mouse | OVA-alum-driven model of allergic airway inflammation | HES | HES given at allergen sensitization or challenge reduced airway cellular infiltrates and lung eosinophilia | |
| Mouse | HES | HES blocked lung eosinophilia, IL-33 release, and innate lymphoid cell type 2 cytokine production | ||
| Mouse | TNBS-induced colitis | Intraperitoneal helminth protein administration reduced macroscopic inflammation scores and reduced proinflammatory cytokine release (IL-17 and IFN-γ) | ||
| Mouse | Systemic–fatal anaphylaxis | |||
| Mouse | T1D (spontaneous development in NOD mice) | |||
| Mouse | T1D (spontaneous development in NOD mice) | |||
| Mouse | OVA-alum-driven model of allergic airway inflammation and DSS-induced colitis | Recombinant cysteine protease inhibitor (cystatin) of | ||
| Mouse | DSS-induced colitis | Helminth-product-treated mice had reduced clinical and colonic microscopic inflammation scores compared to control mice | ||
| Mouse | T1D (spontaneous development in NOD mice) | Exposure to worm or egg extract prevented disease onset if given before 4 weeks of age | ||
| Mouse | DSS-induced colitis | ES products from | Exposure to helminth products reduced intestinal proinflammatory cytokine expression | |
| Humans | CD and UC | Live | Three out of four CD patients entered remission; fourth patient had a reduction in symptoms. UC patients had a reduction in clinical colitis activity index | |
| Humans | CD | Live | 79.3% of patients had a reduction in CD activity index or remitted | |
| Humans | CD | Live | All doses tested were well tolerated and did not result in treatment-related side effects. Efficacy of a reduction in disease severity not assessed | |
| Humans | UC | Live | A reduction in disease activity was seen in helminth- infected patients compared to placebo group, although this did not reach statistical significance | |
| Humans | CD | IBD questionnaire results were improved, and cumulative CD activity index scores were decreased | ||
| Humans | Allergic rhinoconjunctivitis | Infection well tolerated; no significant differences in allergic symptoms between groups given placebo or |
Abbreviations: OVA, ovalbumin; alum, potassium aluminum sulfate; ES, excretory/secretory; HES, H. polygyrus excretory/secretory product; HDM, house dust mite; BALF, bronchoalveolar lavage fluid; IL, interleukin; IFN, interferon; DSS, dextran sulfate sodium; TNBS, 2,4,6-trinitrobenzene sulfonic acid; T1D, type 1 diabetes; NOD, non-obese diabetic; CD, Crohn’s disease; UC, ulcerative colitis; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; Th, T-helper.
Microbiota-based therapeutic studies
| Organism | Disease | Treatment | Description of effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rat | HLA-B27 transgenic rats (colitis model) | Inulin and FOS | Decreased severity of intestinal inflammation (FOS treatment resulted in less disease severity than inulin) | |
| Rat | T1D (BB-DP rat model) | Administration of | ||
| Mouse | T1D (spontaneous development in NOD mice) | VSL#3 (probiotic compound: containing | Reduced insulitis and decreased beta cell destruction | |
| Mouse | HDM-driven model of allergic airway inflammation | Diet supplemented with 30% pectin | Increased concentrations of SCFAs and decreased allergic inflammation in the lungs of murine HDM model of airway inflammation | |
| Mouse | OVA-alum-driven model of airway inflammation | scGOS/lcFOS, and scGOS/lcFOS + pAOS | Suppressed airway inflammation and hyperresponsiveness | |
| Mouse | CMA model | scGOS/lcFOS + | Increased serum galectin-9 and galectin-9 expression by intestinal epithelial cells. Also, reduced acute allergic skin reaction and mast cell degranulation | |
| Rat | T1D (STZ model) | GLP-1(1-37) secreted by | ||
| Mouse | IBD (IL-10-deficient colitis model) | Prior to SPF flora exposure, treatment of GF IL-10 deficient mice with | ||
| Mouse | IBD (DSS-induced colitis model) | Mice receiving the probiotic mixture for 7 days prior to DSS induction of colitis showed reduced mucosal inflammation and damage compared to controls that did not receive the therapy | ||
| Mouse | IBD (IL-10-deficient and DSS-induced colitis models) | Oral treatment with | ||
| Mouse | OVA-alum-driven model of airway inflammation | Protected against airway inflammation in OVA-sensitized mice and blocked induction of OVA-specific IgE | ||
| Mouse | OVA-alum-driven model of airway inflammation | |||
| Human | Eczema | After 6 weeks of probiotic therapy, 56% of children (aged 1–13 years) experienced improved eczema, while only 15% of placebo controls reported improved symptoms | ||
| Human | UC | Enema solution containing | Improved mucosal inflammation and decreased inflammatory cytokines in children with UC | |
| Human | AR | Compared with patients receiving levocetirizine only, | ||
| Human | Pollen allergy | Reduced ocular symptom scores during exposure to Japanese cedar pollen | ||
| Human | Peanut allergy | Subjects (82.1%) receiving combination peanut oral immunotherapy + | ||
| Human | AD, recurrent wheeze, allergic urticaria | scGOS + lcFOS | Prebiotic group had significantly lower incidences of allergic manifestations | |
| Human | AD | scGOS/lcFOS + | Increased galectin-9 expression and reduced AD in infants with IgE-mediated eczema 12 weeks posttreatment | |
| Human | Asthma | scGOS/lcFOS + | Decreased prevalence of frequent wheezing and usage of asthma medications in children with AD after 1 year follow- up evaluation | |
| Human | Asthma, eczema, allergic rhinoconjunctivitis | Oral supplementation with | ||
| Human | UC | Mutaflor® is as effective at preventing relapses as the established mesalazine therapy in patients with UC. Patients (36.4%) receiving Mutaflor for 12 months experienced relapses compared to 33.9% in the mesalazine group | ||
| Human | UC | Inulin-oligofructose (Synergy® 1) + | Reduced chronic inflammatory markers of UC (TNFα and IL-1α) |
Abbreviations: HLA, human leukocyte antigen; FOS, fructooligosaccharide; T1D, type 1 diabetes; BB-DP, bio-breeding diabetes-prone; NOD, non-obese diabetic; IFN, interferon; IL, interleukin; OVA, ovalbumin; alum, potassium aluminum sulfate; SCFA, short-chain fatty acid; DSS, dextran sulfate sodium; scGOS, short-chain galactooligosaccharide; lcFOS, long-chain fructooligosaccharide; pAOS, pectin-derived acidic oligosaccharide; CMA, cow’s milk allergy; GLP, glucagon-like peptide; UC, ulcerative colitis; STZ, streptozotocin; SPF, specific pathogen-free; GF, germ-free; AD, atopic dermatitis; AR, allergic rhinitis; HDM, house dust mite; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease; FVC, forced expiratory vital capacity; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in 1 second; ATCC, American Type Culture Collection; Ig, immunoglobulin.
Figure 2A depiction of the early life environmental exposures differentially associated with promoting a healthy intestinal microbiota, which results in intestinal homeostasis and immune tolerance, and a dysbiotic (unhealthy) intestinal microbiota, which may induce the development of immune dysregulation.
Abbreviations: vs, versus; T1D, type 1 diabetes; IBD, inflammatory bowel disease.