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Mucosal metabolites fuel the growth and virulence of E. coli linked to Crohn’s disease
Shiying Zhang, … , R. Balfour Sartor, Kenneth W. Simpson
Shiying Zhang, … , R. Balfour Sartor, Kenneth W. Simpson
Published April 12, 2022
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2022;7(10):e157013. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.157013.
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Research Article Inflammation Microbiology

Mucosal metabolites fuel the growth and virulence of E. coli linked to Crohn’s disease

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Abstract

Elucidating how resident enteric bacteria interact with their hosts to promote health or inflammation is of central importance to diarrheal and inflammatory bowel diseases across species. Here, we integrated the microbial and chemical microenvironment of a patient’s ileal mucosa with their clinical phenotype and genotype to identify factors favoring the growth and virulence of adherent and invasive E. coli (AIEC) linked to Crohn’s disease. We determined that the ileal niche of AIEC was characterized by inflammation, dysbiosis, coculture of Enterococcus, and oxidative stress. We discovered that mucosal metabolites supported general growth of ileal E. coli, with a selective effect of ethanolamine on AIEC that was augmented by cometabolism of ileitis-associated amino acids and glutathione and by symbiosis-associated fucose. This metabolic plasticity was facilitated by the eut and pdu microcompartments, amino acid metabolism, γ-glutamyl-cycle, and pleiotropic stress responses. We linked metabolism to virulence and found that ethanolamine and glutamine enhanced AIEC motility, infectivity, and proinflammatory responses in vitro. We connected use of ethanolamine to intestinal inflammation and L-fuculose phosphate aldolase (fucA) to symbiosis in AIEC monoassociated IL10–/– mice. Collectively, we established that AIEC were pathoadapted to utilize mucosal metabolites associated with health and inflammation for growth and virulence, enabling the transition from symbiont to pathogen in a susceptible host.

Authors

Shiying Zhang, Xochitl Morgan, Belgin Dogan, Francois-Pierre Martin, Suzy Strickler, Akihiko Oka, Jeremy Herzog, Bo Liu, Scot E. Dowd, Curtis Huttenhower, Matthieu Pichaud, Esra I. Dogan, Jack Satsangi, Randy Longman, Rhonda Yantiss, Lukas A. Mueller, Ellen J. Scherl, R. Balfour Sartor, Kenneth W. Simpson

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Figure 2

Crohn’s disease and ileitis shape the mucosal metabolome, with enrichment in glycerophospholipids and creatine related to AIEC.

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Crohn’s disease and ileitis shape the mucosal metabolome, with enrichmen...
(A) Principal components analysis. Ellipses correspond to 95% confidence of data mean. (B) Contribution of metabolites to PCA. Arrow length corresponds to magnitude of contribution. (C) Metabolites associated with disease, patient genotype, and culture status. Kruskal-Wallis tests (Benjamini-Hochberg FDR) were used to determine metabolites with differential abundance between groups of interest. For all associations with P < 0.05, effect size (η2) was calculated. Intensity of color corresponds to magnitude of effect, and color corresponds to direction of effect. Symbols indicate significance of association after false discovery correction (**q < 0.01, *q < 0.05, +q < 0.1, ^ q < 0.2).

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