| Literature DB >> 35439436 |
Katya Frazier1, Amal Kambal1, Elizabeth A Zale2, Joseph F Pierre3, Nathaniel Hubert1, Sawako Miyoshi4, Jun Miyoshi5, Daina L Ringus6, Dylan Harris1, Karen Yang1, Katherine Carroll1, Jake B Hermanson3, John S Chlystek7, Katherine A Overmyer8, Candace M Cham1, Mark W Musch1, Joshua J Coon9, Eugene B Chang1, Vanessa A Leone10.
Abstract
Gut microbial diurnal oscillations are important diet-dependent drivers of host circadian rhythms and metabolism ensuring optimal energy balance. However, the interplay between diet, microbes, and host factors sustaining intestinal oscillations is complex and poorly understood. Here, using a mouse model, we report the host C-type lectin antimicrobial peptide Reg3γ works with key ileal microbes to orchestrate these interactions in a bidirectional manner and does not correlate with the intestinal core circadian clock. High-fat diet is the primary driver of microbial oscillators that impair host metabolic homeostasis, resulting in arrhythmic host Reg3γ expression that secondarily drives abundance and oscillation of key gut microbes. This illustrates transkingdom coordination of biological rhythms primarily influenced by diet and reciprocal sensor-effector signals between host and microbial components, ultimately driving metabolism. Restoring the gut microbiota's capacity to sense dietary signals mediated by specific host factors such as Reg3γ could be harnessed to improve metabolic dysfunction.Entities:
Keywords: Reg3γ; circadian rhythms; diurnal oscillation; germ free; gut microbiota; high-fat diet; host-microbe interactions; innate immunity; organoid; small intestine
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35439436 PMCID: PMC9281554 DOI: 10.1016/j.chom.2022.03.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell Host Microbe ISSN: 1931-3128 Impact factor: 31.316