iScience (Dec 2020)

Simulating the Post-gastric Bypass Intestinal Microenvironment Uncovers a Barrier-Stabilizing Role for FXR

  • Mohammed K. Hankir,
  • Theresa Langseder,
  • Ezgi Eyluel Bankoglu,
  • Yalda Ghoreishi,
  • Ulrich Dischinger,
  • Max Kurlbaum,
  • Matthias Kroiss,
  • Christoph Otto,
  • Carel W. le Roux,
  • Tulika Arora,
  • Florian Seyfried,
  • Nicolas Schlegel

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 12
p. 101777

Abstract

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Summary: Regional changes to the intestinal microenvironment brought about by Roux-en-Y gastric bypass (RYGB) surgery may contribute to some of its potent systemic metabolic benefits through favorably regulating various local cellular processes. Here, we show that the intestinal contents of RYGB-operated compared with sham-operated rats region-dependently confer superior glycemic control to recipient germ-free mice in association with suppression of endotoxemia. Correspondingly, they had direct barrier-stabilizing effects on an intestinal epithelial cell line which, for bile-exposed intestinal contents, were partly farnesoid X receptor (FXR)-dependent. Further, circulating fibroblast growth factor 19 levels, a readout of intestinal FXR activation, negatively correlated with endotoxemia severity in longitudinal cohort of RYGB patients. These findings suggest that various host- and/or microbiota-derived luminal factors region-specifically and synergistically stabilize the intestinal epithelial barrier following RYGB through FXR signaling, which could potentially be leveraged to better treat endotoxemia-induced insulin resistance in obesity in a non-invasive and more targeted manner.

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