Germs in Your Gut Keeps You Healthy: Study
When it comes to fighting off pathogens like Listeria, your best allies
may be the billions of microorganisms that line your gut, suggests a new
study.
The study revealed that germ-free mice are more susceptible to infection
with the foodborne pathogen Listeria monocytogenes than mice with
conventional intestinal microbiota. The authors were also able to show that expression of five intestinal
microRNA (miRNA) molecules decreases in conventional mice upon Listeria
infection while it did not in germ-free mice, indicating that the gut
microbiota may determine, at least in part, how the mouse genome
expression is reprogrammed in the gut and how the animal responds to an
infection. "We were surprised by the robustness of the intestinal miRNA signature
in germ-free mice and conventional mice," corresponding author Pascale
Cossart of the Institut Pasteur in Paris, France, said. "Our results
show that even very small variations in miRNA expression can have
important outcomes," for the health of the animals. Cossart and her colleagues approached the matter using the system they
know best: Listeria infection. L. monocytogenes is a frequent
contaminant of raw milk products, and a highly publicized outbreak
traced to Listeria-contaminated cantaloupe left 30 people dead in the
fall of 2011. Previous studies in Cossart's lab have shown that during infection with
Listeria, the bacterium AND the host both reprogram their protein
manufacturing using small non-coding RNA molecules like miRNA - pieces
of genetic material that are used to selectively regulate the creation
of proteins.
Here, the researchers used conventional mice and germ-free mice to
address the question of whether - and how - the gut microbiota has an
effect on the course of infection and on the production of these
regulatory miRNA molecules. Cossart said they found that even though the intestinal miRNA signature
is globally stable, Listeria infection can affect the host miRNA
response in a microbiota-dependent manner. When paralleled with the
lower susceptibility of the conventional mice to infection, these
down-regulated regulatory molecules present an intriguing result, write
the authors. She noted that although this study was conducted in mice, miRNA and the
protein coding gene targets they regulate may be very similar in mice
and in humans. The study was published in journal mBio
Source:mBio
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