Intestinal fungi contribute to development of alcoholic liver disease

An-Ming Yang(University of California San Diego), Tatsuo Inamine(University of California San Diego), K Hochrath(University of California San Diego), Peng Chen(University of California San Diego), Lirui Wang(University of California San Diego), Cristina Llorente(University of California San Diego), Sena Bluemel(University of California San Diego), Phillipp Hartmann(University of California San Diego), Jun Xu(University of California San Diego), Yukinori Koyama(University of California San Diego), Tatiana Kisseleva(University of California San Diego), Manolito Torralba(J. Craig Venter Institute), Kelvin Moncera(J. Craig Venter Institute), Karen Beeri(J. Craig Venter Institute), Chien‐Sheng Chen(National Central University), K Freese(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Claus Hellerbrand(Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg), Serene M. L. Lee(LMU Klinikum), Hal M. Hoffman(University of California San Diego), Wajahat Z. Mehal(Yale University), Guadalupe García–Tsao(Yale University), Ece Mutlu(Rush University Medical Center), Ali Keshavarzian(Rush University Medical Center), Gordon D. Brown(University of Aberdeen), Samuel B. Ho(University of California San Diego), Ramón Bataller(University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill), Peter Stärkel(UCLouvain), Derrick E. Fouts(J. Craig Venter Institute), Bernd Schnabl(University of California San Diego)
Journal of Clinical Investigation
May 21, 2017
Cited by 461Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Chronic liver disease with cirrhosis is the 12th leading cause of death in the United States, and alcoholic liver disease accounts for approximately half of all cirrhosis deaths. Chronic alcohol consumption is associated with intestinal bacterial dysbiosis, yet we understand little about the contribution of intestinal fungi, or mycobiota, to alcoholic liver disease. Here we have demonstrated that chronic alcohol administration increases mycobiota populations and translocation of fungal β-glucan into systemic circulation in mice. Treating mice with antifungal agents reduced intestinal fungal overgrowth, decreased β-glucan translocation, and ameliorated ethanol-induced liver disease. Using bone marrow chimeric mice, we found that β-glucan induces liver inflammation via the C-type lectin-like receptor CLEC7A on Kupffer cells and possibly other bone marrow-derived cells. Subsequent increases in IL-1β expression and secretion contributed to hepatocyte damage and promoted development of ethanol-induced liver disease. We observed that alcohol-dependent patients displayed reduced intestinal fungal diversity and Candida overgrowth. Compared with healthy individuals and patients with non-alcohol-related cirrhosis, alcoholic cirrhosis patients had increased systemic exposure and immune response to mycobiota. Moreover, the levels of extraintestinal exposure and immune response correlated with mortality. Thus, chronic alcohol consumption is associated with an altered mycobiota and translocation of fungal products. Manipulating the intestinal mycobiome might be an effective strategy for attenuating alcohol-related liver disease.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis