Bifidobacteria-mediated immune system imprinting early in life

Bethany M. Henrick(University of Nebraska–Lincoln), Lucie Rodriguez(Karolinska Institutet), Tadepally Lakshmikanth(Science for Life Laboratory), Christian Pou(Karolinska Institutet), Ewa Henckel(Science for Life Laboratory), Aron Arzoomand(Karolinska Institutet), Axel Olin(Karolinska Institutet), Jun Wang(Karolinska Institutet), Jaromír Mikeš(Science for Life Laboratory), Ziyang Tan(Science for Life Laboratory), Yang Chen(Science for Life Laboratory), Amy M. Ehrlich, Anna Karin Bernhardsson(Science for Life Laboratory), Constantin Habimana Mugabo(Science for Life Laboratory), Ylva Ambrosiani(Karolinska Institutet), Anna Gustafsson(Karolinska Institutet), Stephanie Chew, Heather K. Brown, Johann Prambs, Kajsa Bohlin(Karolinska University Hospital), Ryan Mitchell, Mark A. Underwood(UC Davis Children's Hospital), Jennifer T. Smilowitz(University of California, Davis), J. Bruce German(University of California, Davis), Steven A. Frese(University of Nevada, Reno), Petter Brodin(Science for Life Laboratory)
Cited by 766Open Access
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Abstract

Immune-microbe interactions early in life influence the risk of allergies, asthma, and other inflammatory diseases. Breastfeeding guides healthier immune-microbe relationships by providing nutrients to specialized microbes that in turn benefit the host's immune system. Such bacteria have co-evolved with humans but are now increasingly rare in modern societies. Here we show that a lack of bifidobacteria, and in particular depletion of genes required for human milk oligosaccharide (HMO) utilization from the metagenome, is associated with systemic inflammation and immune dysregulation early in life. In breastfed infants given Bifidobacterium infantis EVC001, which expresses all HMO-utilization genes, intestinal T helper 2 (Th2) and Th17 cytokines were silenced and interferon β (IFNβ) was induced. Fecal water from EVC001-supplemented infants contains abundant indolelactate and B. infantis-derived indole-3-lactic acid (ILA) upregulated immunoregulatory galectin-1 in Th2 and Th17 cells during polarization, providing a functional link between beneficial microbes and immunoregulation during the first months of life.


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