代谢组
平衡
糖尿病
生物
葡萄糖稳态
细胞生物学
医学
代谢组学
生物信息学
内分泌学
胰岛素抵抗
作者
Bree J. Tillett,Jacky Dwiyanto,Kate R. Secombe,T. Neville George,Vivian Zhang,Dovile Anderson,E. Duggan,Rabina Giri,Dorothy Loo,Thomas Stoll,Mark Morrison,Jakob Begun,Michelle M. Hill,Esteban N. Gurzov,Kirstine J. Bell,Sonia Saad,Christopher K. Barlow,Darren J. Creek,Chun Wie Chong,Eliana Mariño
标识
DOI:10.1038/s41467-025-58319-y
摘要
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is linked to an altered gut microbiota characterized by reduced short-chain fatty acid (SCFA) production. Oral delivery of a SCFA-yielding biotherapy in adults with T1D was followed by increased SCFAs, altered gut microbiota and immunoregulation, as well as delaying diabetes in preclinical models. Here, we show that SCFA-biotherapy in humans is accompanied by remodeling of the gut proteome and mucosal immune homeostasis. Metabolomics showed arginine, glutamate, nucleotide and tryptophan metabolism were enriched following the SCFA-biotherapy, and found metabolites that correlated with glycemic control. Fecal microbiota transfer demonstrated that the microbiota of SCFA-responders delayed diabetes progression in humanized gnotobiotic mice. The protected mice increased similar metabolite pathways to the humans including producing aryl-hydrocarbon receptor ligands and reducing inflammatory mucosal immunity and increasing IgA production in the gut. These data demonstrate that a potent SCFA immunomodulator promotes multiple beneficial pathways and supports targeting the microbiota as an approach against T1D. Trial registration: Australia New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12618001391268.
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