Back to Search Start Over

Microbiota imbalance induced by dietary sugar disrupts immune-mediated protection from metabolic syndrome

Authors :
Yoshinaga Kawano
Madeline Edwards
Yiming Huang
Angelina M. Bilate
Leandro P. Araujo
Takeshi Tanoue
Koji Atarashi
Mark S. Ladinsky
Steven L. Reiner
Harris H. Wang
Daniel Mucida
Kenya Honda
Ivaylo I. Ivanov
Source :
Cell. 185:3501-3519.e20
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2022.

Abstract

How intestinal microbes regulate metabolic syndrome is incompletely understood. We show that intestinal microbiota protects against development of obesity, metabolic syndrome, and pre-diabetic phenotypes by inducing commensal-specific Th17 cells. High-fat, high-sugar diet promoted metabolic disease by depleting Th17-inducing microbes, and recovery of commensal Th17 cells restored protection. Microbiota-induced Th17 cells afforded protection by regulating lipid absorption across intestinal epithelium in an IL-17-dependent manner. Diet-induced loss of protective Th17 cells was mediated by the presence of sugar. Eliminating sugar from high-fat diets protected mice from obesity and metabolic syndrome in a manner dependent on commensal-specific Th17 cells. Sugar and ILC3 promoted outgrowth of Faecalibaculum rodentium that displaced Th17-inducing microbiota. These results define dietary and microbiota factors posing risk for metabolic syndrome. They also define a microbiota-dependent mechanism for immuno-pathogenicity of dietary sugar and highlight an elaborate interaction between diet, microbiota, and intestinal immunity in regulation of metabolic disorders.

Details

ISSN :
00928674
Volume :
185
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....03c00fefcbecbd8c315fac984f055996
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2022.08.005