International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2023)

Dietary-Induced Bacterial Metabolites Reduce Inflammation and Inflammation-Associated Cancer via Vitamin D Pathway

  • Caitlin O’Mahony,
  • Adam Clooney,
  • Siobhan F. Clarke,
  • Mònica Aguilera,
  • Aisling Gavin,
  • Donjete Simnica,
  • Mary Ahern,
  • Aine Fanning,
  • Maurice Stanley,
  • Raul Cabrera Rubio,
  • Elaine Patterson,
  • Tatiana Marques,
  • Rebecca Wall,
  • Aileen Houston,
  • Amr Mahmoud,
  • Michael W. Bennett,
  • Catherine Stanton,
  • Marcus J. Claesson,
  • Paul D. Cotter,
  • Fergus Shanahan,
  • Susan A. Joyce,
  • Silvia Melgar

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms24031864
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 3
p. 1864

Abstract

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Environmental factors, including westernised diets and alterations to the gut microbiota, are considered risk factors for inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). The mechanisms underpinning diet-microbiota-host interactions are poorly understood in IBD. We present evidence that feeding a lard-based high-fat (HF) diet can protect mice from developing DSS-induced acute and chronic colitis and colitis-associated cancer (CAC) by significantly reducing tumour burden/incidence, immune cell infiltration, cytokine profile, and cell proliferation. We show that HF protection was associated with increased gut microbial diversity and a significant reduction in Proteobacteria and an increase in Firmicutes and Clostridium cluster XIVa abundance. Microbial functionality was modulated in terms of signalling fatty acids and bile acids (BA). Faecal secondary BAs were significantly induced to include moieties that can activate the vitamin D receptor (VDR), a nuclear receptor richly represented in the intestine and colon. Indeed, colonic VDR downstream target genes were upregulated in HF-fed mice and in combinatorial lipid-BAs-treated intestinal HT29 epithelial cells. Collectively, our data indicate that HF diet protects against colitis and CAC risk through gut microbiota and BA metabolites modulating vitamin D targeting pathways. Our data highlights the complex relationship between dietary fat-induced alterations of microbiota-host interactions in IBD/CAC pathophysiology.

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