| Literature DB >> 30054517 |
Quentin N Wilson1, Magan Wells1, Ashley T Davis1, Christina Sherrill1, Matthew C B Tsilimigras2, Roshonda B Jones2, Anthony A Fodor2, Kylie Kavanagh3.
Abstract
Monkeys demonstrate gastrointestinal barrier dysfunction (leaky gut) as evidenced by higher biomarkers of microbial translocation (MT) and inflammation with ageing despite equivalent health status, and lifelong diet and environmental conditions. We evaluated colonic structural, microbiomic and functional changes in old female vervet monkeys (Chlorocebus aethiops sabeus) and how age-related leaky gut alters responses to Western diet. We additionally assessed serum bovine immunoglobulin therapy to lower MT burden. MT was increased in old monkeys despite comparable histological appearance of the ascending colon. Microbiome profiles from 16S sequencing did not show large differences by age grouping, but there was evidence for higher mucosal bacterial loads using qPCR. Innate immune responses were increased in old monkeys consistent with higher MT burdens. Western diet challenge led to elevations in glycemic and hepatic biochemistry values only in old monkeys, and immunoglobulin therapy was not effective in reducing MT markers or improving metabolic health. We interpret these findings to suggest that ageing may lead to lower control over colonization at the mucosal surface, and reduced clearance of pathogens resulting in MT and inflammation. Leaky gut in ageing, which is not readily rescued by innate immune support with immunoglobulin, primes the liver for negative consequences of high fat, high sugar diets.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30054517 PMCID: PMC6063974 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-018-29473-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Overview of monkey cohorts described within this report.
Figure 2Microbial translocation was higher in old monkeys despite lifelong environmental and dietary equivalence and good health. Endotoxin levels detected in portal vein plasma were more frequently elevated in old monkeys (Top Panel A). Lipopolysaccharide binding protein 1 (LBP-1) was also higher (Bottom Panel B). Results are from monkeys described in Study 1 (n = 9 young and n = 10 old monkeys).
Histological parameters measured from young and old monkeys evaluated in Study 1.
| Young (n = 9) | Old (n = 10) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Crypt depth (µm) | 320 (22.7) | 321 (11.35) | 0.49 |
| Goblet cells (#/100 µm) | 12.31 (0.46) | 12.51 (0.60) | 0.49 |
| Mucus staining (% area) | 71.40 (3.71) | 71.32 (2.53) | 0.99 |
| Muscularis layer thickness (µm) | 801 (93) | 799 (88) | 0.39 |
| Occludin staining (% area) | 3.77 (0.50) | 4.10 (0.59) | 0.67 |
| Claudin staining (score) | 1.95 (0.28) | 3.00 (0.53) | 0.08 |
Values are mean, with the SE shown in parentheses.
Figure 3Non-specific immune responses to microbial translocation are higher in old monkeys. Plasma levels of secretory immunoglobulin A (IgA; Top Panel A) and antimicrobial peptide, alpha defensin (α-defensin; Bottom Panel B) are significantly different in young and old monkeys. Results are from monkeys described in Study 1 (n = 9 young and n = 10 old monkeys).
Figure 4Old monkeys had higher bacterial loads detected from samples retrieved from the mucosa of the ascending colon. The DNA content of the mucosal samples was greater in old monkeys (A). The DNA was likely related to the presence of more bacteria as mean sequence depth by Illumina DNA sequencing identified to bacterial taxa (B) were approximately 1.35 fold higher in old monkeys, and PCR-measured total bacterial 16S gene counts normalized to tissue weight (C) were more than doubled on average in old monkeys. The colon mucosa is protected by a mucus layer which physically separates the microbiome. Goblet cells, which produce mucus, relate to bacterial gene counts on the mucosal surface such that more goblet cells were associated with fewer bacterial genes (D; young monkeys are open circles [○] and old monkeys are closed circles [●]). The microbiome profile did not differentiate by age in monkeys consuming the same diet and exposed to the same lifelong conditions (Panel E; LI = large intestine). Results are from monkeys described in Study 1 (n = 9 young and n = 10 old monkeys).
Figure 5Old monkeys had significant deleterious health effects when challenged with 8 weeks of a Western diet. We observed that old monkeys significantly increase plasma glucose (Panel A), cholesterol (Panel B), and liver enzymes alanine aminotransferase (ALT; Panel C) and alkaline phosphatase (ALP; Panel D) whereas young monkeys were able to maintain homeostasis under the same dietary challenge conditions. Old monkeys maintained on a chow diet showed no changes over time. Old monkeys are shown with black bars, young monkeys are shown in white, and the post-diet challenge value indicated for each group by checkerboard. Results are from monkeys described in Study 2 (n = 6/group).
Selected outcome variables measured in old monkeys after placebo or 2 weeks of treatment with serum bovine immunoglobulins (SBI).
| N | BW | Waist | Glucose | TPC | ALT | ALP | LBP-1 | sCD14 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| kg | cm | mg/dL | (mg/dL) | (U/L) | (U/L) | ng/mL | ng/mL | ||
| Placebo | 5 | 5.38 (0.25) | 35.4 (0.40) | 95.6 (25.3) | 349 (64.5) | 143 (15.5) | 145 (28.8) | 4.47 (0.88) | 2.47 (0.21) |
| SBI | 6 | 5.43 (0.30) | 36.3 (1.01) | 118 (23.2) | 301 (64.2) | 159 (51.5) | 178 (31.1) | 5.67 (0.96) | 2.66 (0.17) |
| p-value | 0.27 | 0.28 | 0.23 | 0.44 | 0.06 | 0.66 | 0.53 | 0.58 |
Values are mean, with the SE shown in parentheses.