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Antibiotics damage the colonic mucus barrier in a microbiota-independent manner

by | 9月 11, 2024 | 西醫臨床科硏實證, 快遞點評, 科學抗疫

對不起,此内容只適用於English

By Jasmin Sawaed et al.

Source Science

Abstract

Antibiotic use is a risk factor for development of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs). IBDs are characterized by a damaged mucus layer, which does not separate the intestinal epithelium from the microbiota. Here, we hypothesized that antibiotics affect the integrity of the mucus barrier, which allows bacterial penetrance and predisposes to intestinal inflammation. We found that antibiotic treatment led to breakdown of the colonic mucus barrier and penetration of bacteria into the mucus layer. Using fecal microbiota transplant, RNA sequencing followed by machine learning, ex vivo mucus secretion measurements, and antibiotic treatment of germ-free mice, we determined that antibiotics induce endoplasmic reticulum stress in the colon that inhibits colonic mucus secretion in a microbiota-independent manner.
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