| Literature DB >> 35677055 |
Weijie Wang1, Yongsheng Fan2, Xinchang Wang1.
Abstract
The cause of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus (SLE) remains largely unknown, despite the fact that it is well understood that a complex interaction between genes and environment is required for disease development. Microbiota serve as activators and are essential to immune homeostasis. Lactobacillus is thought to be an environmental agent affecting the development of SLE. However, beneficial therapeutic and anti-inflammatory effects of Lactobacillus on SLE were also explored. The discovery of Lactobacillus involvement in SLE will shed light on how SLE develops, as well as finding microbiota-targeted biomarkers and novel therapies. In this review, we attempt to describe the two sides of Lactobacillus in the occurrence, development, treatment and prognosis of SLE. We also discuss the effect of different strains Lactobacillus on immune cells, murine lupus, and patients. Finally, we try to illustrate the potential immunological mechanisms of Lactobacillus on SLE and provide evidence for further microbiota-targeted therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Lactobacillus; immunoregulators; microbiota; pathogenesis; systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35677055 PMCID: PMC9168270 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2022.883747
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 8.786
Figure 1Potential beneficial functions of Lactobacillus and Lactobacillus-derived bioactive metabolites in the treatment of SLE and the communication pathways on Lactobacilli-kidney axis. HDACs, histone deacetylases; GPCRs, ligands for G-protein-coupled receptors; SCFAs, Short-chain fatty acids.
The cohort studies on Lactobacillus in SLE patients.
| Study | Location | Inclusion criteria | SLE/HC (patients) | Microbiota (species of | correlation between SLEDAI and |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yao Li, et al., 2019 ( | China | 19 active patients (SLEDAI>8), 21 remissive patients | 40 SLE/20RA/22HC | Fecal samples: enrichment of | |
| Mengchen Guo, et al., 2020 ( | China | 20SLE received GC;17 SLE non-GC | 20SLE+G/17SLE-G/20HC | Fecal samples: | Associated with glucocorticoid therapy |
| Bao-Zhu Li, et al., 2020 ( | China | 20 SLE patients | 20/19 | Oral samples: | NA |
| Ying Zhao, et al., 2020 ( | China | 20 lupus erythematosus dermatology patients | 20/20 | Fecal samples: enrichment of | NA |
| Fengping Liu, et al.2021 ( | China | active and remissive SLE; | 35/35 | Fecal samples: enrichment of | disease severity might play a role in abundance of |
| Marian A. Gerges, et al., 2021 ( | Egypt | Newly diagnosed, treatment-naive SLE cases | 20/20 | Fecal samples: Decrease of | an inverse but nonsignificant correlation |
| Taco A van der Meulen, | Netherlands | 30SLE | 30SLE/39PSS/965HC | Fecal and oral samples: | NA |
| Min Wen, et al., 2021 ( | China | Children with SLE/LN | 33/28 | Fecal samples: enrichment of | NA |
SLE, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus; RA, Rheumatoid Arthritis; PSS, primary Sjögren’s syndrome; HC, health controls; LN, lupus nephritis; GC, glucocorticoids; NA, none applicable.
Figure 2Potential mechanisms by which the Lactobacillus triggers the autoimmunity of SLE.
Studies investigating the Lactobacillus in murine lupus.
| Study | Animal model | Lactobacillus strain | Effect on immuneresponse | Potential cytokines and signals |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daniel F. Zegarra-Ruiz, et al., 2019 ( | TLR7-dependent Mice | Exacerbated lupus-related pathogenesis | TLR7/IFN-pathway | |
| Néstor de la Visitación, et al.2021 ( | Lupus model induced by TLR7 activation | Prevented the development of hypertension and endothelial dysfunction | Restored Th17/Treg balance in vascular tissues | |
| Wei-Syun Hu, et al., 2017 ( | NZB/W F1 mice | anti-fibrosis and anti-apoptotic effects on the cardiac tissue | Increased PI3K, Bcl-xl, and Bcl2 and reduce MMP-9 and COX2 | |
| Tsai-Ching Hsu, et al., 2017 ( | NZB/W F1 mice | Ameliorated hepatic apoptosis and inflammatory indicators; Antioxidant | Reduced IL-1β, IL-6 and TNF-α in the livers | |
| Fatemeh Mardani, et al., 2018 ( | pristane‐induced mice | Delayed and controlled | Decreased Th1 and Th17; | |
| Toral M, et al., 2019 ( | NZB/W F1 mice | Prevented endothelial dysfunction and vascular oxidative stress | Reduced B and T lymphocytes, IL-6, IL-1b, and TNF-a, | |
| Bor-Show Tzang, et al., 2017 ( | NZB/W F1 mice | Antioxidant | Increased CD4+CD25+FoxP3+T cells. | |
| Yeh YL, et al., 2021 ( | NZB/W F1 Mice | cardiac protective | PI3K/Akt pathway | |
| A Mike, et al., 1999 ( | MRL/lpr mice | Prevented the expansion of B220+ T cells | Reduced IL-6 | |
| Qinghui Mu, et al., 2017 | MRL/lpr mice | a mixture of 5 | Anti-inflammatory | Increased IL-10 and decreased IgG2a t |
| Da Som Kim, et al., 2021 ( | MRL/lpr mice | Decreased the proportion of double negative T Cells and renal inflammation | Modulated Th17/Treg balance |
SLE, Systemic Lupus Erythematosus; LN, lupus nephritis.